Born into an environment steeped in the arts. Michael Hensley
developed a keen interest in painting while in his late teens.
At the age of 18, he moved from New Mexico to New York and began
his formal training, which included a disciplined study of
anatomy. Mankind’s place as an integral force in nature and the
struggle of man, is the core of the inspiration with which he
approaches his large and passionate paintings.
Art & Antiques-
Michael Hensley’s figure drawings and depiction of human drama,
“Ascent” and “Descent”, add a dimension rarely seen outside the
world’s great museums.
Art & Antiques-
Michael Hensley’s work is formed with aspiration.
Tally Richards, Art Dealer-
Michael Hensley created a book before he started to paint some
of his masterpieces, a book of detailed and exquisite anatomy.
Each muscle, each limb of the human body is rendered in the
utmost detail and accuracy. Hensley knows how each muscle works,
how each looks when still or when in movement. After he finished
his book, he moved onto a canvas to create a museum-quality
painting of more than one hundred figures, all anatomically
correct, all beautifully rendered and all in one massive room
size painting. The time Hensley spends on his work is indicative
of his philosophy. “Art should be something people strive for,
work hard at and dedicate their lives to,” says Michael Hensley,
“not something you randomly knock out in half an hour with no
thought at all. Create to the best of your ability, and let
history take care of the rest.” Artist’s who take pride and time
with their art, who put in years of study and personal passion,
are unusual in today’s world of “marketable” art. Unlike other
artist’s who’s works have no warmth, nothing personal, the
paintings of Michael Hensley, shall we say, seem to have a soul.
Taos News-
Hensley’s drawing, The “Voice of Silence” won Best of Show and
the People’s Choice award. Hensley’s nude figure studies are
impeccably rendered. His work has almost a Germanic
draftsmanship quality not unlike Albrecht Durer.
Taos News-
Michael Hensley’s “Genesis” must be seen to be appreciated. It
is a simple figure painting, but the musculature, color scheme
and size carry a nearly religious power on the shoulders of the
powerful man represented.
Taos News-
Paintings, in a sense, are like a symphony orchestra; there can
be so much going on, that one can get away with a lot. But a
drawing is like a solo voice or instrument: naked; it all hangs
out. Only the most ruthless honesty will work. Hensley’s figure
drawings are in the great tradition, and it is encouraging that
so comparatively young an artist has had the guts and patience
to submit himself to a discipline only too often neglected in
these hurry-up days.
Art Talk-
Be
sure not to miss the massive mural sized canvases of Michael
Hensley. This is a spiritual & surrealistic body of work (with
great attention to detail of the human form) that is not to be
missed!
Taos Today, A Walking Guide-
Where do we come from and where are we going? Michael Hensley
commented on this in his colored pencil drawing “Genesis,” which
comes from a series created around the same subject. “Everything
is cyclical,” the artist said. “Genesis” deals with the
emergence of life and creation. All the figures are connected in
some way. We all depend on each other for survival. The great
thinkers are contemplating what is truly important in life
amidst the chaos around them. All that truly matters in this
world is kindness and how we treat others.” “Genesis” is
grounded in a mass of large heads, some with eyes closed to
represent the great thinkers of past ages: Tolstoy, Lao Tzu,
Leonardo Da Vinci, Ludwig Van Beethoven, and others. These heads
are connected by elongated nude figures weaving in and out of
each other. He said “everything is done with exaggeration,
physical strength is used to represent intellectual strength.”
Nothing lasts, not even this show, so stop by the museum and see
it before it’s over. It’s wonderful to have such strong work
featured in Taos.
Taos News–
Taos Art Museum–
After graduating from high school, Michael spent the summer in
Woodstock, New York, studying with Vladimir Bachinsky,
considered one of the great artist and muralist of the century.
Because of Bachinsky’s inspiration and enthusiasm for art,
Michael acquired a genuine passion for the masters of the past
as well as the importance of great draftsmanship.
Michael was particularly inspired by the masters of the High
Renaissance. With Vladimir’s recommendation, Michael left home
at the age of 18 to attend the Art Students League and the
National Academy of Design in New York City. Because he showed
so much promise as a Draftsman, Michael was granted a full
scholarship at the request of his instructor Gustav Rehberger.
Passionately interested in the human figure, Michael was
constantly drawing from life. When unable to draw from live
models, he spent all his free time studying canons of proportion
and human anatomy. These masterful drawings done in his late
teens show all the struggle and determination of a young artisan
learning to master his craft. The comprehensive collection of
Michael’s youthful figure studies is considered by many to be a
masterpiece in its own right and as a result those studies have
been compiled into book format and are awaiting publication.
Michael began exhibiting his work with the Park Slope Art
Association, Salmagundi Club, the Brooklyn Conservatory and the
Brooklyn Museum of Art. After only one year, his instructor,
Rehberger, told him that “he had learned his lessons well and
continuing with a formal education would only hamper his
individuality and growth as an artist” and “it was time to
follow his own path”.
This time coincided with the period in which his mother’s health
had rapidly declined. While raising his son Havean, Michael’s
interest in philosophy and classical literature began to make
its way on to the canvas. Working on mural size canvases,
Michael began his pictorial Tour de Force the “Ascent” and
“Descent”. Using his knowledge of anatomy, Michael set out to
fill these masterpieces with human figures in every conceivable
position. The finished paintings were a culmination of several
years work.
During this time, Michael had also begun two other large
emotionally charged paintings. One a crucifixion entitled
“Sangre de Cristo,” which was painted as a tribute to his ailing
mother and a very personal painting entitled “Prometheus Bound.”
After his mother’s death, Michael painted “Allegory of Time” a
tribute to her memory and one of his most personal and moving
paintings. At this time Michael was also creating a new
surrealistic body of work. The images emanate from a divine
creator both figuratively and metaphorically. Intermingled human
forms bursting with nervous tension and energy are harmoniously
interlocked with the great sages of the past who are seemingly
contemplating mankind’s predestined fate. It is here in this
broad, humanistic conception that Michael aspires to convey the
unrelenting spirit of mankind while still enjoying to work from
live models. It is this theme that currently permeates his
thoughts. The Taos news wrote, “Michael created a book before he
started to paint some of his masterpieces - a book of detailed
and exquisite anatomy. Each muscle, each limb of the human body
is rendered in the utmost detail and accuracy. Hensley knows how
each muscle works, how each looks when still or when in
movement. After he finished his book, he moved onto a canvas to
create a museum-quality painting of more than one hundred
figures, all anatomically correct, all beautifully rendered and
all in one massive room sized painting.”
No
doubt Hensley has given and will continue to give his own
special gift of timeless beauty and awareness to all of humanity
through his exquisite work. Michael summarized it well when he
said “You do what you can, and history will take care of the
rest.”
Portales News- Tribune-
Associated Press-
Stop and look at Michael Hensley’s meticulously drawn series of
“Knowledge Seekers of the World” based on history’s most
contemplative and philosophical figures. In his pencil drawings
and watercolors with pastel, he depicts more than what Plato and
Aristotle might have looked like in their day-you can feel the
inner spirit of a wisdom seeker.
Taos Today, A Walking Guide-