Former Lawyer Turned Artist Geoffrey Stein Joins the Elisabeth Haub School of Law as Artist-in-Residence
The Elisabeth Haub School of Law at 91视频 will welcome renowned portrait and collage artist Geoffrey Stein as Artist-in-residence this Spring. The residency is the law school鈥檚 first official year-long program of its kind, providing enrichment and educational opportunities for both law and art students at 91视频.
Stein will begin his residency at Haub Law on February 10, 2022, utilizing space in a common area on the 3rd floor of the Gerber Glass Library each Thursday to showcase his process. He will also have access to the collections of the Library for research and inspiration. The Artist-in-residence will conclude in Spring 2023 with a public lecture, painting demonstration and exhibition of the work completed during the residency period, which will draw inspiration from the people of Haub Law and its rich history.
鈥淲e are thrilled to welcome Geoffrey to Haub Law and to be part of this unique experience at a law school. Drawing on his legal background, Geoffrey鈥檚 art captures the meaning behind historical moments, political and influential figures by using the work product of his subjects,鈥 said Horace E. Anderson Jr, Dean and Professor of Law at Haub Law. 鈥淣ot only will we liven our campus with art, but this will be an opportunity to reflect on and memorialize Haub Law鈥檚 history.鈥
Geoffrey Stein is a self-proclaimed 鈥渞ecovering lawyer鈥 who has been painting full-time since 2000. He received his law degree from Albany Law School in 1986, then clerked for an appellate court and practiced reinsurance litigation work for Lloyd's of London and London Market Reinsurers at Sheft & Sheft, Ober|Kaler, and later with Mendes & Mount.He says his background as a lawyer has had a huge influence on his work, both on the process and subject matter. 鈥淭he organizational and critical skills required in the legal world are incredibly helpful to have when working in the more nebulous and open-ended realm of the art world. The skills necessary to organize a brief or conduct discovery translate easily to complex art projects, which often involve numerous people and more writing then I ever imagined,鈥 says Stein. 鈥淎lso, there was a strange, but nice, thing I noticed when returning to art school as an allegedly 鈥渕ature鈥 student: I was not seeking the teachers' approval, but rather simply trying to engage them in a dialogue about the work.鈥
Stein鈥檚 work stems from his interest in the political, financial and media worlds. He calls himself a 鈥渃onceptual portrait painter鈥 using snippets of text and photographs as the basis of his art to create the subject鈥檚 likeness and evoke meaning. His subjects include: Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Queen Elizabeth, Anthony Fauci, Kamala Harris, presidents, financial icons, comics and more.
鈥淚t was a natural direction for me to try and make work about actors in these worlds, both those I admire and those I don鈥檛,鈥 Stein says. 鈥淚ncreasingly, though, I am most interested in figures whom I admire and provide some hope in this difficult time. For instance, my portrait of A.O.C. was done with copies of Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez's powerful speech on the House floor addressing Rep. Ted Yoho's awful comments about her. I hope I captured some of her passion and strength in my portrait.鈥
Stein looks forward to engaging students, faculty and staff in dialog while he works. 鈥The point of any artist residency is to take one out of their everyday world, their comfort zone, and shake things up,鈥 adds Stein. 鈥淚 have not been in a law school on a regular basis since graduating 35 years ago. I hope that being at the Elisabeth Haub School of Law for a year will help me look at my work in new ways and inspire me to go in unimagined directions.鈥
Geoffrey Stein received a Certificate in painting from the New York Studio School in 2004 and an MFA from the Slade School of Fine Art, London in 2007. He lives and paints in New York City and Westport and is represented by The Minster Gallery in the UK. or .