

"Untitled" Original Watercolor on Paper
by Mel Carter
Hand Singed by the Artist

Art Size: 33" x 41"
Image Size: 21" x 29"
Art Condition: mint (include brand new custom frame)


Make an Offer!!

Mel Carter
Mel
Carter is highly revered in the Denver area as a unique artist and an
insightful teacher. He moved to Denver in 1965 and taught art at the
University of Colorado at Denver for nearly 30 years. Many artists
attribute their success, at least in part, to Mel’s encouragement and
instructive comments on their work. They hold him in high esteem as both
mentor and friend.
Always
an artist, Mel was born in Birmingham, Alabama but studied worldwide.
He earned his MFA at the University of Illinois and then studied in the
Netherlands on a Fulbright scholarship. He attended the Catholic
University in Lima, Peru, and the Lorenzo de Medici Institute in
Florence, Italy. Whether teaching at University College in London, the
University of Rome or the Sorbonne in Paris, or merely experiencing
life, he painted the people and places of his travels.
Mel
was acknowledged as a master at bringing life to landscapes and
capturing both powerful and evocative nuances in his male and female
studies. Mel’s work has been admired and honored in many local, national
and international exhibitions.
He
is recognized as one of the 30 most significant artists of this
century. Besides showing well over 70 exhibits, Mel’s work has been
featured in art films and a wide variety of publications. He was a
member of the Governor’s Selection Committee for Excellence in the Arts,
on the Board of the Cherry Creek Arts Festival, and a juror for
numerous art shows. His works are included in collections in the Denver
community and around the world.
Not
merely a painter of life, Mel was a participant! He involved himself
with his students, whether by accommodating schedules of those who
needed to work, or holding the line if they fought against themselves.
As Mel traveled, he documented his journeys through beautifully
illustrated sketchbooks. Then he showed his students how to engage with
the world as they passed through it and make sketchbooks of their own.
As
a Commissioner of Art for the City and County of Denver, Mel took an
active role, with a particular eye toward public funding for minority
artists. Among other kindly works, an exhibit of Mel’s yearly Christmas
cards, always with the word Peace, and the presence of an angel, served
as a fund raising gift to Project Angel Heart.
Mel’s love of old Denver architecture kept him happily settled in Capitol Hill for 20 years, until his death in 1998. Denver is honored to remember Mel Carter not only as an artist, but as a teacher, a role model and a friend.

