Featured
Artist for December 1998
| Featured
GiveAway by William H. Hall Prince Rupert Harbour 24" x
36" - 1997 Oil on Canvas Valued at $1500 | |
|
Dr. J. B. Davidson Tucson,
Arizona | |
Hannibal seized the moment at British Columbia's Prince Rupert Harbour.
He openly illustrates the location's natural beauty and captures the harbour's
remarkable quietude, including portrayal of his subject's marine atmosphere. His
emphasis of cool colors and values permeate the canvas' air while stimulating
dampness for the viewer.
MEET THE
ARTIST
| Featured Artist
William H. Hall
(Hannibal) | William
H. Hall (also known as Hannibal) was born in Montreal, Quebec, Canada on August
9th, 1943. He currently works out of his studio and resides on the outskirts of
Vancouver in British Columbia, Canada. His background is from a dysfunctional
family, so details of his early family life are far and few between. He was raised
as a ward of the government and funded his university schooling primarily with
custom oil painting and wall murals. Creative genes have been passed to and from
Hannibal; his mother was exceptionally skilled in art, as is his daughter. Hannibal
himself has been active in the visual arts since adolescence, as his childhood
works stood at the “top of the class”. He has always felt a strong inclination
towards drawing objects like ships and trains. Primarily self taught in art, Hannibal
has taken occasional formal training to sharpen certain skills. |
Hannibal enrolled
in courses years ago at Alberta College of Edmonton and has taken extensive training
in CAD (Usually 3D). He is a biologist by trade and a former Canadian Army Officer.
His preferred media is oil and his paintings usually take 40-60 hours to complete.
He creates about one painting each week. He's been painting and cartooning for
30 years and his oils and acrylics have been used for traditional "living room"
viewing, usually on a commission basis. In addition, his military scenes adorn
the walls of many military clubs and associations throughout the world. In recent
years, however, he's wanted to paint more non-military subjects -- hence the cars,
trains and other subjects. Bill is an active member of the Federation
of Canadian Artists which is the professional artists association in Canada known
as the FCA. He relies on his Web Site so others can contact him and he's really
kept busy with steady traffic and commissions. All of his art is pleasing, and
with modest prices listed with his work, one can see why he focuses on online
commissions rather than actual exhibitions.
| Kettle Valley Train is a beautiful painting that
shows a past era when the powerful steam locomotives pulled freight and passengers
from British Columbia's interior coast, over a railway called the "Kettle Valley".
Today, nothing is left but a few road-beds. Hannibal took his canvas to the site,
and painted the background first on a rainy spring day. He then used an old photograph
to add the locomotive. At night, when the lights are off, he's added a spark of
interest: "Glow-in-the-dark" paint, on the lamp of the engine. |
Kettle
Valley Train, 1996 24" x 36", Oil on Canvas, Framed, $2000
| As
for his military background, it's interesting how one can go from a rigidly disciplined
area to the freedom expressed in his art. In his actual heart of hearts, Hannibal
appreciates the beautiful world we live in; mankind's outstanding history and
invented machines which he illustrates. He says that during this past century,
"Few artists seem to want to illustrate this in any accurate way." His
military assignments and personal travels have taken him to Europe, Russia, and
Central Africa, giving him an abundance of material to explain through his work.
The War
is Over, 1995 24" x 36", Oil on Canvas Framed, $1500 | The
War Is Over shows B-17's that were used as daylight bombers, thoroughly engaged
when hostilities ended in 1945. In a magazine story illustration assigned to him,
he created a work about an American bomber pilot, who upon hearing the news, was
ordered to still finish his mission. Instead, he opted to return to England without
dropping bombs. As he flew back over lake Constantine (Switzerland), a chance
encounter unfolded with a Focke Wulf. Both the German pilot and the Americans
kept their hands off the guns, actually waved(!) and went home. The war was over.
| Hannibal
finds beauty everywhere. Not just in nature, but in the power of man’s creations.
He's inspired by how man has used his skill to create machines. Events in history
fascinate him as well, particularly those of this past century. He feels a need
to depict this fascination through his work and hopes that in the next century,
his work will survive in order to show our lives and inventions of the 20th century.
He does most of his drawing and lay-in’s in the morning and continues more detailed
painting in the evening. He often paints until the wee hours of morning and finds
himself still working when the sun comes up. Being
alive and healthy in this most exciting time makes Hannibal tick. So does pure
Maslow; recognition and his own imagination. He's clearly aware of his surroundings
and tries to take advantage of them when at all possible. He loves good books,
music and of course, painting. On the other hand, he's not fond of negative people
and violence.
| John
Paul Jones is a famous scene from the British/American war. It is based on
the statement: "I've just begun to fight..." Hannibal believes that few battles
have had more of an impact on North American history. This work was painted from
a copy of a small pencil sketch that he saw in a magazine years ago and is created
in hue's of gold and framed beautifully. Upon close viewing, one can practically
feel a breeze beneath the sails. |
John Paul Jones,
1997 36" x
48", Oil on Canvas Framed, $2000 |
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Hannibal also works as
a field business manager in the bioscience industry, looking after their interests
in Western Canada and Ontario. This actually works well for him because when using
oils, his days away from home allow the current painting to dry so he can continue
as soon as he returns. It also explains why he stays up all night: so he can work
with the same values before he has to leave it. Hannibal creates his work mainly
for commissions and assignments and in spite of this not being his "day-job,"
he considers himself a professional artist above all.
There are many things in addition to painting that Hannibal says is more of an
enjoyable compulsion. Singing is one of them; he sings bass in a 100 voice community
choir. He's also a grandfather in his mid-50s who enjoys rendering 3D subjects
and frame by frame animation using the PC. Running his online site and collecting
antique watches also bring him fulfillment.
| | Old
Cadillac in Woods is a beautiful example of 1950's auto-art and was found
just as it appears, on an Indian reservation in Northern BC. How in the world
did it ever get there with no paved highways for hundreds of miles?! Well, as
Hannibal says... "Here it is...on old yet still beautiful car. Where's she
been? What journey has she been on? Well, now she sits quietly in the woods, waiting
for you to find her." He often hikes in remote areas looking for old cars,
trucks and equipment to illustrate. He emphasizes the car's tint against the dull
green foliage and says those flowers were actually there. Effects laid on its
windshield probe the viewer for a second look. |
Old Cadillac in
Woods, 1996 24" x 30", Oil and acrylic on canvas board, framed, $1000
| His
studio overlooks the actively beautiful Fraser River where he works in oil, acrylics
and air-brush, when he desires exceptionally vivid and realistic paintings. His
present subjects include historical scenes that are typically military; ships,
automobiles, trains and aircraft. A somewhat unique feature of Bill's painting
is his use of light and shadows to enhance the 3D effect. He uses the "Z-Axis"
to bring the viewer into his pictures. Many of his original paintings also glow
in the dark from use of a special paint. His work has been used for magazine and
story illustration and it's not uncommon to see his paintings hanging in military
clubs and mess halls. Hannibal uses only the highest quality materials in his
work and commercially stretched canvas. All of his paintings are professionally
framed upon completion.
| Hindenberg
& The Ghost illustrates how very large an Airship she was ! Of the 97
passengers on board, 62 survived the mishap. Hannibal has recorded all the factors
in effect on that fateful day, including what must have been a guardian angel,
because the entire event took only a bit more than one minute. A considerable
factor while looking at the picture is that the Hindenberg was longer than the
Titanic and filled with explosive gas. This work was submitted as a story illustration
that Hannibal regrets to say was not accepted. The publisher chose to use another
(where the ship had ignited) though he prefers this one. The Hindenberg was an
object of beauty and a milestone of 20th century aviation. |
| Hindenberg
& the Ghost, 1994 24" x 36", Oil on Canvas Framed, $1500 |
Contact
the Artist Please Email ArtQuest
for sales information
THE
ARTIST'S STATEMENT Sometimes
the world seems as if it belongs to me. I am a product of it and my environment
together. At those moments, I create landscapes, seascapes and the like. However
at other times, I feel my existence in this universe is only momentary. I’m a
bit-player in the over-all scheme of things. I am truly impressed with the history
of Man. Particularly as he coped with, and changed His own environment, his machines,
his weapons. That’s when I will create the historical scenes. I particularly like
the 20th century - and of that, the war years: 1914 -1918 and 1939 -1945. I will
spend a lot of time doing research into the actual events the painting will illustrate,
even down to the weather. I will try to speak to people who were actually there.
(At times, it is their own commission that I'm creating). But whatever the motive
of my work, I realize that a beautiful painting will confer some immortality on
me. A good illustration will survive for centuries. That’s my legacy I suppose.
I can leave something beautiful. Thank you for looking at my work. ~ William
H. Hall |