Michael Esch is an artist in Colorado. He has worked professionally for over 40 years with work placed throughout the US, and recognized for realist and stylized cloudscapes, in oil, acrylic and multi-media glass installations. He has performed extensive commission work ranging from small to extremely large paintings, for private, corporate and institutional collections.
EDUCATION
1969-1972 Colorado College - Colorado Springs
1982-1986 Univ. of Colorado - BFA Magna Cum Laude
REPRESENTED BY
King Galleries / Santa Fe, NM and Scottdale, AZ
EXHIBITS / SHOWS
1982: Two Person - Sharf Gallery; Sante Fe, NM
1983: Colorado 83, Fine Arts Center, Colorado Springs
1984: Tech Art, University of Colorado
1985: Artists of Colorado, University of Colorado
1986: Artists of the West, Colorado Springs
1988: Aires Invitational
1991: Colorado State Capital Competition Invitational
1995: Frameworks Gallery Exhibit, Colorado Springs
1997: Air Force Academy Commission Opening
MAJOR COMMISSIONS
Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center Purchase Award
Alfred Stone Collection - Washington DC
Hewlett Packard - Briargate Installation
Digital Equipment Corporation - Woodman Offices
ITT Corporation - FELEC Offices
Honeywell Corporation - Quail Lake
Melcher Collection - Los Angeles
William Key Collection - Los Angeles
Thomas Bernard - Chicago
Arnold Selfridge - New York, NY
Lockheed - San Jose (Computer Animation)
Western National Bank Headquarters Colorado Springs
United States Air Force Academy(50’ by 320’ painting)
Buckley Air Force Base MCS Facility Art Program
Penrose Hospital – Colorado Springs
Schriever Air Force Base JNIC -Multi media glass wall
St. Francis Hospital -- Oil paintings, glass and lenticular wall
University of Colorado Hospital - Multi media glass wall
ARTISTS STATEMENT
Over the course of five decades as a professional artist, my creative legacy has included a broad variety of media and methods, including conceptual multimedia installations, large-scale murals, and multiple painting traditions. This cumulative experience has resulted at this point of my career in a concentrated focus on photorealist landscape and cloudscape painting. Although my realist landscapes are grounded in the geography of the western United States, the cloud formations that dominate my compositions transcend regional specificity, suggesting skyscapes thatcould occur anywhere in the world.
Certain locations in the American West and near my home in Colorado possess a profound personal and spiritual significance for me. When I spend time in these environments, I often experience a heightened awareness of unity between myself and nature, and a sense of temporal suspension in which consciousness becomes integrated with the surrounding world. My artistic intention is to translate this state of interconnectedness into visual form. While the canvas itself is an inert surface, I hope to instill each work with the energy and presence I experience during its creation, such that viewers might perceive and participate in that same sense of transcendence.
The absence of manmade structures in my work is both a conceptual and aesthetic decision. On an analytical level, I regard human civilization as having aesthetically and materially compromised many natural environments; thus, I am compelled to exclude artificial elements from my compositions. This act of omission functions as both a compositional discipline and a philosophical stance—one that seeks to honor the integrity of the natural world unaltered by human intervention. But more importantly, when I stand before a landscape I intend to paint, my consciousness and perception instinctively erase all signs of human presence. In this stillness and suspended time, I encounter the emotional and conceptual clarity necessary to realize the work.
For much of my career, I was reluctant to articulate the spiritual and noetic dimension of my artistic practice. However, I believe contemporary culture has evolved to a point where such visual discourse is both relevant and comprehensible. The creation of a painting represents only the initial stage of my artistic process; the completion occurs when a viewer experiences a corresponding emotional or spiritual resonance. Through this shared engagement, my art aspires to bridge the individual and the universal, affirming the enduring bond between humanity and the natural world.