Joseph Goldberg (Uncommon Gifts)

Uncommon Gifts

Joseph Goldberg

(1947-2017)

On his mother: "I started drawing because she did, but I taught myself to paint."

Joseph Goldberg: Jeweled Earth by Nathan Kernan and Regina Hackett.  Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2007.

Joseph Goldberg built a reputation in Seattle during the 1970s and 1980s making abstract, luminous encaustic paintings. An avid agate collector, he and his artist friend Wesley Wehr would "…rent a car and drive to Oregon or California, visiting agate collectors and dealers. The small little agate shops, we'd pull into every one we saw...I wanted to get that same translucency in the waxes that are in those agates. I was very much influenced by agates."*

The first time Goldberg sold a painting for several thousand dollars he bought a pickup, filled it with his belongings and left for the dry expanses of eastern Washington. He kept a studio near Soap Lake for sixteen years and currently lives and works near Harrington, Washington. Raised in the Spokane Valley, he takes inspiration from the landscape he grew up in. "Deserts have that sense of space that I keep trying to get. In 2006 I started to use space as the subject of painting, space pushing everything else to the edge. One way or another, everything I do ends up being a landscape."*

*Joseph Goldberg: Jeweled Earth by Nathan Kernan and Regina Hackett.  Seattle: University of Washington Press, 2007

  • Studied painting, University of Washington, 1965-1968
  • Betty Bowen Award, Seattle Art Museum, 1980
  • Retrospective, Museum of Northwest Art, La Conner, Washington, 2007
  • Represented in 28 public collections, including: Brooklyn Museum of Fine Art, New York; Carpenter Art Galleries, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; Municipal Gallery of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland; and Seattle Art Museum
 
Fishing Lanes

Fishing Lanes

"You make marks. One requires another to balance it out. A painting is an experiment that suggests other experiments."

“Joseph Goldberg’s New Encaustic Paintings Glow with a Mute Radiance” by Regina Hacket. The Seattle Post-Intelligencer.... [more]
Trout Water #2

Trout Water #2

Encaustic is an ancient process that involves imbedding pigment in layers of wax.

Goldberg taught himself to paint an image using water-based paint on a layer of hardened wax. Heating the surface of each layer as it is built draws the pigment... [more]
Untitled

Untitled

Goldberg says his work from the late 1960s looked like, “Small little fantasy landscapes in crayon. Houses, ponds, and a spider sky. It was personal, nature inspired work, work with a little fantasy. They’re psychological landscapes. Still to this... [more]
Untitled

Untitled

Goldberg says his work from the late 1960s looked like, “Small little fantasy landscapes in crayon. Houses, ponds, and a spider sky. It was personal, nature inspired work, work with a little fantasy. They’re psychological landscapes. Still to this... [more]
Untitled

Untitled

Goldberg says his work from the late 1960s looked like, “Small little fantasy landscapes in crayon. Houses, ponds, and a spider sky. It was personal, nature inspired work, work with a little fantasy. They’re psychological landscapes. Still to this... [more]