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Andrea & John Alvin art show

Last summer I had the pleasure of interviewing the amazingly talented Andrea Alvin at her lovely home in Rhinebeck, New York. She provided wonderful comments on Richard Amsel's work, as well as the artistic legacy of her late husband, John Alvin.




I wanted to help spread the word of a new gallery show of the Alvins' creative oeuvre that opens today. Any art and movie lovers near New York should definitely check it out!



Rhinebeck resident Andrea Alvin, together with her husband John Alvin, produced some of the most iconic movie posters of the last 50 years. From Young Frankenstein to Goonies, E.T. The Extra Terrestrial, Blade Runner, and The Lion King, his illustrations and her designs are indelibly imprinted on the movie-going consciousness.


“John was one of those artists who could draw anything out of his head,” remembers Andrea Alvin of her late husband. “We relied on each other creatively.”


This relationship, this “creative shorthand,” will be on display at Poughkeepsie’s Gallery 330 from July 5. Their joint exhibition will pair prints of the team’s posters with Andrea’s own oil painting works, focused around pop art subjects like candy, toys, and other popular iconography.


The Alvins would work from either a concept, script, or finished film to come up with their posters. “I came up with a design that depicted certain things,” says Andrea. “I did the layout, the proportions, the particular poses. But I knew what John could do with that to make it special,” what she describes as a sort of “misty quality.”


Andrea credits this interaction with the entertainment industry with inspiring her own fine arts interest in products and pop culture.


“When John did a movie poster,” she says, “he wanted to promise a great experience with this one image, and he had a lot of emotion in his work. That affected my work in still-life, because I’m still bringing in that lighting and that emotional quality.”


More than anything, Andrea hopes that her continued advocacy for her late husband’s work, through exhibitions and The Art of John Alvin, published by Titan Books in 2013, will increase public awareness about the man, and the work, behind the iconography.


“If you say E.T., you immediately think of his poster, but they don’t know his name, and I’m trying to change that,” she says. “That’s important to me now: associating John Alvin with all the great work that he did.”


Gallery 330, Poughkeepsie, 845.590.8922






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Website designed and maintained by Adam McDaniel. All featured photographs, reproductions, and scans of Richard Amsel's artwork are presented here via Fair Use Laws, for the purposes of educational insight, historical analysis, and creative criticism, and are not intended to infringe on any copyrights; images came from either the public domain, my own personal research and scans, or were expressly provided to me for inclusion on this site. All original content, including writing and commentary, including the article "The Art & Artistry of Richard Amsel: American Illustrator" © 2008, 2020 by Adam McDaniel. All rights reserved, and registered with the Writers Guild of America. The documentary "AMSEL: ILLUSTRATOR OF THE LOST ART", the book "RICHARD AMSEL", and Amsel's work as featured in this website are through an exclusive agreement with the Richard Amsel estate.

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