Chistopher Magadini
Steady Flow
12 x 16 " oil on canvas
Hudson Shore
16 x 20" oil on canvas
Looking for Smallmouths
12 x 18 x 2" oil on canvas
Harmony
20 x 30" oil on canvas
Big Pine
12" x 9”, oil on canvas
Tractor Path
12 x 16" oil on canvas
Little Red
12 x 16" oil on canvas
High Point
22 x 28" oil on canvas
Reaching Out
16 x 20" oil on canvas
Artist Statement
Magadini said, “For me, painting is not simply the replication of what the eye sees. It is the creation of an image that embodies my thoughts and feelings. These, I think, are fairly universal, and I seek to communicate and connect with viewers on that level.”
In recent years, Magadini has become known as a plein air painter. His growing popularity has brought avid collectors to galleries where his work has been exhibited worldwide. A former illustrator, Magadini’s credits include covers for Reader's Digest magazine, illustrations and promotional brochures for Reader's Digest Books, and illustrations for Guideposts, Angels, Field & Stream, Boating, Audubon, Flying, Women's Day, Scholastic Books and Zebra Books. He has designed stamps for the United Nations and the current American Heritage Series Collectors Plates for Royal Copenhagen USA. Illustrated books include Bible Life and Times; The Illustrated Dictionary of Bible Life and Times; After Jesus; A Passage to India; Great Disasters and Rodale's Naturally Great Foods Cookbook.
Christopher Magadini was born in Great Barrington, MA, in 1946, and raised in Palm Springs, CA, Los Angeles and Phoenix. After graduating from The Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles in 1970, Magadini pursued commercial illustration in Stockholm, Sweden. He returned to Phoenix, AZ, where he continued working commercially. In 1975, Mr. Magadini moved to Flagstaff, AZ, to teach art at Northern Arizona State University. In 1978, he received a full fellowship to Syracuse University and came east to earn a M.F.A. degree. Thereafter, he moved to the New York metropolitan area to further his career as a free-lance illustrator.
Magadini has taught at Marymount College in Tarrytown, NY, and has been a guest lecturer at the School of Visual Arts in Manhattan. He lives in Great Barrington, Massachusetts and summers in the Adirondacks.