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The Blues Audience newsletter
62 Cricket Hill Rd.
Harrisville, NH 03450
603-827-3952

email:

dshonk@bluesaudience.com

©2006 Across The Board
Graphic Design, publishers of
The Blues Audience newsletter.

 

This page is dedicated to remembering much loved and admired,
and vastly talented Charlie Harrison A.K.A. Charlie Frank
"outsider" artist and musician.

Charlie had a very "deep" (for lack of a better word) sense of humor. This bumper sticker was a hand out at his first show at BagelWorks in Keene. There are pictures further down the page of that day.

He also created one that said "what will I think tomorrow."

and another "walk with a new shadow."

This was his business card. Really wonderful, playful
but deep at the same time.

This painting is on a big canvas, I think it is one of his best. I do not know who it is, but the first time I saw it was in Peter's car the day of Charlie's funeral. I call it beautiful girl. If you know who this is email me!

I bought a few of his paintings and featured them on the cover of my newsletter, The Blues Audience. This first one was on the cover of the June/July 2007 issue in which I wrote about his passing. This is a self portrait that Isaac Hall lent me. It was on the altar at the church in Nelson, during the service. That was a very sad day and there were many tears all around.

 

His painting style was free and he was not afraid of color.
He did many sculptural and multi dimensional works that are unfortunately not included here.

He went through a phase when his work
was very "dark" and cerebral.

Many of his more recent paintings had a sense of fun, eventhough you can see his "tear in the eye" theme in may of his paintings of people and the above self portrait. His untimely death has left those of us who knew and loved him, at a loss for words.

He was intelligent and inquisitive.
He loved gettting new information, new music, learning.




He loved to play slide guitar and he studied the techniques of the great slide bluesmen. He had a lot of soul and depth of character. He also loved Bob Dylan, and looked a little like a young Bob Dylan, with beautiful curly brown hair and big eyes,
and he had the brightest smile!


Mississippi John Hurt, 2005
These appeared on the cover of my newsletter, The Blues Audience, where Charlie worked for me for a few months building "The Blues Audience Archives" a huge collection of information about, and pictures of, blues musicians, blues clubs and record companies.

Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Willie McTell, 2005

I will be adding more images of his other work as I get them. There are lots of beautiful portraits and abstract paintings and scultpures out there. If you have one I do not have, take a picture of it and send it to me. Email me at dshonk@bluesaudience.com for specific instructions of how to make it into something I can use here on the web.

 

He was a proilfic painter, painting on anything he had around at the time.


Charlie painted two pictures on a piece of heavy board
this side has screws on the sides

This is the other side


This one is on a panel from a Newman's Organic Pretzels box.
It says "I Got On The Train and I Didn't Think of You."

 

 

Charlie was 30 years old when he succumbed to an asthma attack in his apartment in Keene, NH.

Charlie at the show at Bagel Works. His paintings in the background. A number of them were wrapped in "Saran wrap," very conceptual.


Charlie, Isaac Hall, Charlie's best friend and Jim Rousmaniere talk at the Bagel Works Show.

Self Portrait

This one looks like it might be Danielle, his beautiful blonde girlfriend.




Helicopter Flowers



Peter, Charlie's father, took these photos at the show at
Bagel Works in Keene, NH