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Carl
Gray Witkop
Charles Harrison Pompa
Clif Tinker
Curtis Wade
Denise Barron
HP
Meyer
Janet Campbell
Kathy Sayre
Mandy Hayes
Mireya Portugal
Natalie
Pizano
Robert Daughters
Scotti G
Walter Marek
WB Thompson
Prints & Posters
Ysabel Fuentes
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My
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Get to know me...
Artist Clif Tinker has lived all across the United
States in his lifetime. He
was born in Virginia, graduated from Fullerton Union High School in California,
and spent time in Colorado, Montana, New Mexico and Texas. He lived in
Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, for three months in 1983, where he attended
language school to learn Danish. He earned his BA in psychology from the
University of Houston in 1981. His first professional artwork was as a paid
daily cartoonist in the University of Houston Newspaper in 1985. He moved to San
Antonio in 1985, earning a BFA in Painting from the University of Texas at San
Antonio in 1992, and an MA in art history in 2001 from UTSA. His master's thesis
is an analysis of the sculptural images, and a history, of the Aztec Theater in
downtown San Antonio.
Tinker is both a working artist and an educator. He
began his teaching career in
1986, working at the San Antonio Art Institute the last seven years it was open.
He is in his twelfth year of public school teaching, currently working at James
Madison High School. In 1993 he designed the nylon banners, known as "The
Transition Game", to decorate the Alamodome for the San Antonio Spurs. At
just over 80,000 square feet, this is the largest work of art in Texas. In 2003,
Tinker designed the official poster for the San Antonio Public Library
Centennial. This poster sold almost 3,000 copies. In 2004 he designed
"San Antonio Spurs Then and Now", a
commemorative poster commissioned by the San Antonio Spurs to chronicle the
history of the team for the season ticket holders.
Tinker's work is about energy, movement, interaction,
and energy systems. He is a neo-Expressionist, and his work often refers to a
sense of place. Tinker's major series are of downtown San Antonio and the Alamo,
a study of aircraft at the San Antonio airport, the Alamo Cement factory before
it was redone as a shopping center, paintings of the sculpture in the Aztec
Theater in downtown San Antonio, cactus, roosters, African animals, runners,
lizards, and school busses. He has also
done a series of non-representational paintings in the vein of Abstract
Expressionism. The new set of series he is also working on are of scenes along
Broadway in San Antonio from Loop 410 to Downtown, tropical and ocean fish, and
views of Jefferson High School in San Antonio.
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