November 4 - December 31 2023: Doug Ball

Instagram Handle @emil_douglas

ABOUT THE ARTIST

I was born in Norfolk and raised in Northern Virginia. My work in the arts began in Washington, DC, as an actor and set designer at Arena Stage and at The Folger Theatre. After attending Drama School in London I moved to New York City where I acted in, designed, or produced plays off-Broadway and regionally. My most notable role was appearing at the Williamstown Theatre Festival opposite Olympia Dukakis in Tennessee Williams’ Orpheus Descending. In 1981, I won both an OBIE Award and the New York Theatre Wing’s Maharam Award for co-designing the set for Request Concert, directed by Joanne Akalaitis. In NYC I studied figure drawing at the Art Students League and maintained an art studio in Hoboken, NJ. In 1981 one of my artworks, “Rimbaud Record”, was selected for the seminal Times Square Show, which featured early works by Basquiat and Keith Herring. I also became involved in film production design and worked on several major motion pictures in Los Angeles and Manhattan. In the 1980s and 90s I was the production designer for the PBS Series, “From the Brothers Grimm”, American adaptations of traditional folktales, all filmed in Virginia. In the mid 1980s I studied painting with prominent DC artist, William Woodward. During that time I was a member of the Rappahanock Artists’ Co-op and showed my work in multiple exhibits at the Middle Street Gallery in Washington, VA. In 1985 I conceived and produced a regional art show, “The Artists of the Blue Ridge,” in Sperryville, VA.

More recently my work has been exhibited at the Arlington Arts Center, (New Visions/Vibrant Memories, 2022, Dia de los Muertos, 2016). In March 2020, I mounted a one-man exhibit of my paintings at the Falls Church Art & Frame Gallery. Since 2019, my paintings have been marketed locally in the Urban Farmhouse Store’s fine arts collection in Arlington, VA.

DESCRIPTION of Artwork: I work primarily in oil paint. My style and subject varies from abstract to figurative. I am mainly a studio artist but prefer plein air painting, especially in locations around the Shenandoah Valley. I paint landscapes, still lifes, cityscapes, and portraits. I characterize much of my artwork as “l’arte pour l’arte”, but I also paint to process and express my feelings about current social justice issues; my reactions to gun violence, facism, racism, and immigration. I am influenced by Giotto, Goya, and modern masters (Manet, Cezanne, Picasso) as well as by folkloric art from different cultures. Having grown up in Northern Virginia many of my works express my feelings about the changes that development and increased multiculturalism have brought.

You can download The Works of Doug Ball - Pamphlet here.