The Living, Evolving Work of Gary Clark

February 27 & 28 | Friday & Saturday | 4:00 - 8:00pm | 936 Oak Street, Orlando 32804

Eight viewing rooms — along with select off-site locations — present 71 paintings created across decades and organized especially for The Living, Evolving Work of Gary Clark — Art for a Cause. Each space offers a distinct perspective into a practice grounded in observation, intuition, and an enduring commitment to painting.

Online purchasing is available prior to the exhibition dates. Please copy and paste link to Artwork Archive where paintings (framed and unframed) can be viewed and pricing is available. https://www.artworkarchive.com/rooms/clarkgalleryofpaintings/6a907b
During event hours (4:00–8:00 PM), artwork is available for in-person purchase only using PayPal POS.

Purchased paintings are removed at the time of sale. Where applicable, shipping arrangements and rates will be provided. Paintings ship unframed unless otherwise arranged.

Guest artists Jerry Rosembert Moise and Eric Wise will paint live and display their work during the exhibition.

Dining Room

The Dining Room presents a group of landscape paintings based on places in central Florida. Roads, waterways, and shoreline scenes are rendered with loose brushwork, softened edges, and layered color. Together, the works emphasize observation and the physical handling of paint rather than detailed description.

Family Room and Foyer

This viewing area brings together landscape and figurative paintings characterized by simplified form and gestural brushwork. Roads, paths, and figures are reduced to essential shapes, with space organized through color and movement rather than detailed representation. The works vary in their degree of abstraction while remaining grounded in recognizable subjects.

Kitchen

The Kitchen serves as an impact wall, bringing together a focused selection of paintings that highlight the range of Clark’s work. Figures, interiors, architecture, and landscape appear side by side, offering a clear view of his varied subjects and approaches.

Across these works, observed forms are simplified and reorganized through bold contour, compressed space, and strong color relationships. While subjects differ, each painting reflects a consistent attention to drawing, surface, and compositional structure.

Hall to the Backyard

This hallway brings together a small group of figurative and still-life works alongside landscape views. Birds, waterways, and figures appear through simplified form, loose brushwork, and layered color. The paintings are organized by surface, placement, and gesture, creating a visual transition between interior and exterior spaces.

Backyard Pergola

The Backyard Pergola area is a place for relaxation and contemplation. Please enjoy the space.

Master Bedroom

The Master Bedroom presents a focused grouping of figurative works rendered through softened edges, simplified forms, and restrained palettes. Figures emerge through gesture, contour, and layered brushwork rather than detailed description. Together, these paintings emphasize close scale, surface, and the quiet presence of the human form.

Hall to Garage

This passageway features landscapes constructed through simplified forms, layered brushwork, and open spatial relationships. Roads, waterways, and distant structures appear as suggested elements rather than detailed descriptions. Together, the works emphasize surface, movement, and the gradual unfolding of space.

Garage — Still Life / Flowers

Garage Flowers brings together floral still lifes approached through abstraction. Flowers are formed through layered color, gestural brushwork, and simplified structure rather than botanical detail. Across the room, the paintings emphasize surface, repetition, and compositional organization.

Garage — Figures

Garage Figures present a group of figurative works constructed through simplified shape, layered color, and expressive brushwork. Figures are organized by posture, grouping, and placement rather than detailed description. Across the room, form and surface guide the compositions.

Garage — Portable Walls and Landing

This group of nine paintings highlights Clark’s use of bold contour, flattened form, and organized structure across still life, landscape, figurative, and abstract subjects. Interlocking shapes and areas of flat color define each composition, emphasizing surface, balance, and spatial organization.

Two additional abstract works expand this focus through layered gesture and repeated line. Intersecting marks and visible brushwork introduce a more open, process-driven surface while maintaining a strong underlying structure.