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Lois Woolley
is an oil and pastel painter whose specialty is traditional portraiture. Her portraits and
figurative paintings are known for their classic style, rich color and expressive mood.
Woolley's public portrait commissions include a Harvard dean and a Hospital Workers Union
1199 executive. She has been featured in New Art International, Northlight's Pure
Color: The Best of Pastel, The Pastel Journal, and Hudson Valley Magazine.
Honors include being a Fellow of the American Artists Professional League, winning Best
Portfolio 2004 at the Portrait Society of America, and being the 2005 recipient of the Woodstock
Artist Museum's Yasuo Kuniyoshi award. In 2007, she won the prestigious Joseph Giffuni Memorial
Award at the Pastel Society of America's annual exhibit.
A native of Washington, DC, Woolley has been drawn to portraiture since she was nine. Her
desire to paint like her childhood heroes, Rembrandt and Renoir, brought her at age eighteen
to New York's Art Students League, where she studied with Robert Brackman, Robert Beverly
Hale, Daniel Greene and David Leffel. Sargent and Velasquez soon were added to her list
of masters, and ultimately Ilya Repin became her favorite. Always searching to combine full
color with strong form, her association with HongNian Zhang and his palette led to her current
style. In 2000 she co-authored The Yin-Yang of Painting, which presents Zhang's color theory
and method. She teaches portrait painting at the Woodstock School of Art. Represented by
Portraits Inc., Portraits North and Portraits South.
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