Tuesday, March 28, 2023

Spectacular Floral


 Floral - 16x20, framed, oil, Masonite, signed

Courtesy of Brian and Heather Hughes

Old Barn


 #30 Old Barn - 18x24, framed, oil, Masonite, signed

Courtesy of Brian and Heather Hughes

McKenzie Pas


I was informed by Shirley’s daughter Jessica that this painting is called McKenzie Pass. The Pass is located 25 miles northwest of Bend Oregon, between the Three Sisters to the south and Mount Washington to the north. I’m thinking the scene it is at a lower elevation due to the type of trees, deciduous rather than evergreen pine. 

 McKenzie Pass – 24x30, framed, Masonite, oil, signed
Courtesy of Shirley Kelly Burg Estate

Thursday, March 9, 2023

Dick Burg at Mission San Juan Capistrano 1944


 Dick Burg at Mission San Juan Capistrano 1944

Meridian Iron Works


 Meridian Iron Works 

Located at 913 Meridian Avenue in South Pasadena, California, Meridian Iron Works c.1890 is now a museum, South Pasadena Historical Museum. The structure has a kind of false front typical of the frontier wild west. Back in the day this two story redwood building was a general store and as time went on it functioned as a hotel, ticket office, telegraph station, bicycle shop, chapel and a school. In1943 became a foundry know as Meridian Iron Works. San Gabriel is four miles to South Pasadena so Dick definitely was in close proximity of Meridian Iron Works and passed it frequently. Dick’s interpretation is maybe of the 1940s view, weathered and stoic. The building looks to be a work horse on Sunday waiting for Monday.

 

 #20 Meridian Iron Works  16x20, framed, watercolor, signed

 

1906 Autocar Roadster


 #3 1906 Autocar Roadster  

The image is the similar in color scheme to Dick’s #30 1909 Stoddard Dayton but this earlier vehicle only has front seats and no windshield.

 

#3 1906 Autocar Roadster  12x16, framed, oil,  signed Burg and  D. Burg 1965 (on back)

 


Tree and Foothills


 This watercolor was in the lot that was recovered from Shirley Kelly Burg in Oregon in 2022. It has the markings of a quick study.

 

Untitled Tree and foothills  watercolor, unframed, unsigned

Lady with Basket


 

A quant village scene south of the boarder, townsfolk going about their business. The lady with the basket seems to be on a mission and greeting neighbors along the way. 

 

#103 Lady with Basket  12x16, framed, Acrylic, canvass on Masonite, signed

 

Quick Buck


 



Dick 1941

Patricia and Lady Tupper

Another other story from my sister Pat and took place at the Northfield house in the Palisades was about my Dad. He bought a bitch Cocker Spaniel thinking he would make a quick buck breeding purebreds. Her name was Lady Tupper, the heroine of a novel by Daphne DeMaurier (Jamaica Inn, The Birds, Rebecca all became Hitchcock movies) that Mom was reading at the time. The whole thing turned into a fiasco. Dad inadvertently had bred the bitch to its own father. Probably didn’t check all the papers properly.  On the night of delivery the dog only had four pups. She deposited them all over the floor in the garage and they nearly froze to death. My Mother tried to revive them by wrapping them up in towels and placing them on the door of the oven to thaw them out. They survived for a while and eventually one died; they gave one to the person for a stud fee, and another they sold. Dad ended up keeping the last female. Her name was Candy. She was a lovable mutant with a large bump on her head. So much for Dad’s “Quick Buck” foray. This was the dog from my earliest childhood memory.


Friday, March 3, 2023

Contact Information

This Blog was created by Peter Edward Burg, son of Dick Burg. If viewers are interested in more information regarding The Artist Dick Burg please contact Peter at composerburg@gmail.com

Wednesday, March 1, 2023

Untitled Barnscape


This wonderful barnscape was discovered on ebay, but it didn't stay there long

Untitled Barn, Hills, and Trees - 20x24, framed, canvass, oil, signed
Courtesy of Brian and Heather Hughes

Tuesday, February 28, 2023

Dick Burg



High School


   College years   


1980's

                                                                                

 

Untitled Beach Scene



Reminiscent of an earlier time, this beach scene populated by beach combers and bathers, appears to be getting started for the day. Maybe the boardwalk lies just beyond the umbrellas and shacks. 

 Untitled Beach Scene – 13 ½ x 9 ½ , watercolor, framed, unsigned

                                                                 




 Untitled Beach Scene 9½x13½, watercolor, framed, unsigned

Loose and Fun


It seems that Dick had fun with water colors as is apparent with this farmers market on the side of the road. The viewer is given just enough to imagine the owner has just opened up for business and awaits travelers and shoppers needing a reprieve from the road to and pickup a few items to snack on.

Whether it is a sketch for future paintings or just for fun this watercolor has confident and fast feel about it.    

Farmers Ranch Market, watercolor, unframed, unsigned, Dick Burg

Formal Dick Burg

 


Looking dapper in the late 80"s


Thursday, February 23, 2023

San Pedro Harbor


In 2022 I was in communication with Shirley’s daughter Jessica who lives in Bend, Oregon about retrieving a number of paintings of Dick’s. While there visiting, Jessica relayed a most interesting story about Dick. Jessica wasn’t sure of the specifics of year and place but apparently Dick was involved in a show with Winston Churchill and that he mentioned after the show had closed, in his subtle humorous Dick Burg way that he had sold one of his painting and that Winston had sold none. “I sold more than Churchill.”  He was gloating. At first I was skeptical of the tale but after investigating and some research I found evidence that in deed there was truth to the story.

 In the past The Hallmark card company in Kansas City that Dick worked for sponsored a gallery art showing of paintings by Dick but that would have nothing to do with Churchill. As I searched I located a document of a list of paintings and it indicated a painting #119 San Pedro Harbor 20x30 that was gifted to Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri. Westminster College was Dick’s alma mater and the home of the Winston Churchill Museum. Dick must have had a show at the college and gifted the painting then. I contacted Westminster College and verified that the painting was in the art collection on the campus.   



 

#119 San Pedro Harbor 20x30, unframed, oil, canvass on Masonite, signed

Monday, February 20, 2023

Too Young To Work


The sun saturates the foothills with a warm light in the distance. A bow legged man heads back to the barn. Dick’s fascination with rural barn structures continues. The familiar “Dick Burg Dots” are scattered on the tin roof of the barn.

 

#24 Too Young To Work  15x30, framed, acrylic, canvass on Masonite, signed    

 

Ken's Ranch


#18 Ken’s Ranch – 18x24, framed, oil, canvas on Masonite, signed   


#1 After The Roundup – 12x24, framed, acrylic, canvas on Masonite, signed   


Dick remarried in 1981 after Betty passed in 1978  He had met Shirley Kelly at the San Gabriel Fine Arts Association where they were both active members. They had decided to take a road trip for their honeymoon to Shirley’s cousin, Ken Masson, in Nebraska. The plan was to barrow, Dick’s daughter Melissa’s yellow VW beetle and take a leisurely drive into the Midwest. On the way in the vast empty plains of Nebraska their beetle over heated and caught fire and was incinerated leaving a ghastly burn mark in the asphalt highway. After that spectacle, the newlyweds hitched a ride in a bread truck into the nearest town for assistance and then travelled on to Ken’s.


Ken’s Ranch is a misnomer. Ken was the foreman at a ranch named Moon Bow in Dunning, a cow town located in Blaine County, western Nebraska with a sparse population of 100 persons. Moon Bow was a working ranch of a few thousands acres that bred Black Angus and Red Angus with Herford cattle. The Dismal River flowed through the ranch. While there Dick and Shirley were treated to a real traditional round-up. They even mounted horses and rode around the property. Not bad for a seventy year old.

With all the activity Dick was able to sketch and take photographs of the area for later development of paintings. The paintings of this period interestingly featured horses for the first time.

#18 Ken’s Ranch – 18x24, framed, oil, canvas on Masonite, signed         

 

Summer Fun



#134 Summer Fun – 16x20, unframed, acrylic, canvass, signed 

Blue Vase and Flowers


This brisk impressionistic still life must have been a simple study due to being unsigned. The flowers and vase are punctuated by the intensity of the dark background.

#137 Blue Vase and Flowers – 16x20, Framed, Oil, canvass on Masonite, unsigned            

 

Marine Scenes


 #122 Boats for Hire – 20x30, framed, oil, Canvass on Masonite, singed

#112 Three at Rest – 18x24, framed, oil, Canvass on Masonite, signed   

Marine scenes continue with these two works. It is likely that they were executed in Morro Bay area. Morro Bay is home to Morro Rock, which is ancient volcanic mound. There are several Morro Rock paintings that Dick has done, but there are an abundance of docks and small piers that dot the bay that are quite picturesque as well.

 

Gingerbread House


 

#116 Gingerbread House – 18x24, Framed, oil on Masonite, Signed,                    

Fall Colors


 

 #115 Fall Colors – 18x24, unframed, oil on canvass Masonite board, signed