
I got an e-mail last week from someone who knows someone who has a painting by Captain Outrageous titled
Wanna See It Again? She was asking if there's a market for Captain Outrageous art and if knew what the value of this painting might be. She apparently saw my
last posting here
I answered both questions as best I could: I don't know and I don't know. But I did observe these things to her. It must have been an early painting because it is signed simply "
Outrageous" rather than with his copyrighted
Captain Outrageous signature, and below the signature is the postscript
Art Thief. However, she says that the painting is from the early 1970s, and I'm not certain that Captain Outrageous was here at that time. So, the dating might be wrong. The Art Thief appellation most probably refers to one of his early techniques, copying an existing image then transferring it the medium he was painting on and adding his own interpretation on the image by adding color and detail to it. The image of
Wanna See it .. is from an image from Have Gun, Will Travel, a popular television program starring Richard Boone which ran for 227 episodes between 1957 and 1963. Or so I have been told.
When I want to remember what he was like, I go
here. I wish there was more of that.
People come by The Real Key West Gallery occasionally and inquire about Captain Outrageous, some having heard of his demise and some not. Larry and Robin came in yesterday, knew the Captain from their annual visits, and hadn't heard, and were appropriately sad. I told them the short version of what happened then talked about other things. As they were about to leave, Larry said something about the Florida Highwaymen, mostly black artists who sold their work alongside the roads of Florida between the 1930's and the 1950's.
In a remarkable moment of synchronicity, I first heard of the Highwaymen only two days earlier when Jay and Beverly came in to look at
Crosby's work. They also knew Captain Outrageous, had visited with him, knew that he died, in fact read about the
funeral parade through Old Town when they were here last year and realized that they had seen it pass by their guest house without knowing then what occurred and why there was a parade in old town.
Jay and Beverly appear to be serious collectors of art, spoke knowledgeably of the Key West and Florida paintings that they own, and looked through all of the Crosby paintings that we have in the gallery. They have collected a few Highwaymen paintings and explained to me who the Highwaymen were. Larry, the other Highwaymen guy from yesterday, gave me a brochure about them from an exhibit that he and Robin went to in 2006 in Bradenton.
These diversions from my everyday routine are welcome. As Captain did, I enjoy talking with visitors who know something about art and artists. The creative types, the
right-brainers, are fascinating to me, I guess because I'm so left-brain (see below).
Ten minutes after Larry and Robin left, Jay and Beverly came in again and looked again at the Crosby paintings they'd seen on Sunday. They haven't made a decision yet, but they'll be here for another day and may be back. I gave Jay a copy of Larry's brochure.
It's a day off today for me, so I'm off to study
Highwaymen School art for a while.
I'll take up Ashcan School of painting next. Then I'll move on to the
Trash Can School.
Right Brain/ Left Brain Quiz | The higher of these two numbers below indicates which side of your brain has dominance in your life. Realising your right brain/left brain tendancy will help you interact with and to understand others. | | Left Brain Dominance: | (13) | | Right Brain Dominance: | (4) | Right Brain/ Left Brain Quiz |
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