As a young child growing up in the San Fernando Valley north of Los
Angeles, Dick Duerrstein was always drawing.He loved to draw battle
scenes and cars, especially cars that had been designed and painted by
the iconic Ed 'Big Daddy' Roth.His mother's shopping list always
included a note to buy him another ream of white paper, as he quickly
filled every inch of both sides of each sheet with his meticulous
graphite drawings. After high school, he studied at the Art Center
College of Design in Pasadena while working for a graphics firm.
His passion for art, along with his love of Disney comics and
movies, fostered in him the dream of someday working for the Walt
Disney Studios and in 1976 he began his career at Disney as Creative
Director for their Consumer Products Division. Designing Disney
merchandise for the national market, Duerrstein worked alongside many
of the foremost animation artists of the 20th Century, including Ward
Kimball, Marc Davis (and incidentally, with Chuck Jones at Warner
Bros.)For the next 22 years, Dick had the opportunity to use his talent
in many diverse ways, developing his own unique style that is prevalent
in his paintings today.
His experience at Disney working on a wide variety of projects has
given Dick a world-class sense of design.His artwork has adorned
everything from record album covers and clothing to fine collectible
items such as cel portfolios, art glass and furniture.Some of his
published works include a series of three children's books that he
illustrated, and a fine art serigraph series of Mickey Mouse, Minnie
Mouse and Donald Duck.Dick began perfecting his current style of
painting over fifteen years ago.Finding inspiration in the work of
contemporary artists such as Keith Haring, Andy Warhol and David
Hockney, he has imbued his paintings of cartoon characters with new
life.
At home in his studio, Dick begins each painting by simply layering
each aspect of the character, color by color, so that each painting
expands beyond character interpretation.Working primarily on canvas in
acrylics and oil pastels, his striking, contemporary style brings his
images to life in a dramatic and unforgettable fashion.The vibrant
colors and bold brushwork of his art create a sense of movement,
excitement and reverence for the creative process.He truly enjoys the
process of discovery involved in the conception and execution of his
paintings, knowing that he can bring his imagination to life on the
canvas for all to share.
Duerrstein's work can be found in the Walt Disney Studio corporate
offices, Burbank, California; The Library of Congress, Washington, D.C.
and St. Jude's Research Hospital in Memphis, Tennessee and private
collections worldwide.Currently his work is seen in "The Art of Mickey
Mouse" exhibition traveling through Japan.
"I approach each painting, each character with the awe of a child,
but the memories and skills of an adult and consequently, I hope that
my artworks inspire in the viewer that wondrous sense of magical
thinking that Disney imbued each of his characters with and that has
made them such classic icons of American cinema.Having spent much of my
career in my dream-job at Disney Studios, this new opportunity to
interpret and to paint the characters is freighted with much more
meaning than is possible to express in words, so I'll let my art do the
talking for me."