From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ian Hornak (January 9, 1944, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania – December 9,
2002, Southampton, New York) was
an American painter and draughtsman.
Biography
Born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Frank and Rose Hornak
where his mother owned a candy store and his father worked welding
in the shipyards, Ian Hornak moved along with his parents and
younger siblings, Michael and Rosemary, to a farm in Mount Clemens, Michigan at the
age of 8. By age 9 Hornak received a set of oil paints and a book
of important Renaissance paintings from his Mother as a gift and
immediately began copying the works of Michelangelo Buonarroti, Leonardo da
Vinci and Raphael Sanzio. The artist remarked in an
interview with the 57th Street Review in 1976, "I picked up my
technique as a child through my interest in art and copying
paintings I liked. I especially loved Renaissance painting, because
it had clarity and simplification of form and great organization."
Upon graduating from high school in New Haven, Michigan Hornak
relocated to Detroit and
attended the University of Michigan in Ann
Arbor and latter received his BFA and MFA at Wayne
State University where for a short time he was to become a
professor.
Ian Hornak produced hyper-realistic and photorealist artwork with surreal overtones in the
midst of the pop art
movement. He was introduced into the New York art scene in 1968 by Pop Artist, Lowell
Blair Nesbitt, whom Hornak lived and worked with until 1969. By
1971 he maintained his primary residence and studio in East Hampton, NY and a
secondary penthouse studio at 116 East 73rd Street near the corner
of Park Avenue. While living in East Hampton
Hornak came to work with and befriend renown art world figures, Robert
Motherwell, Willem de Kooning, Robert Indiana,
Claes
Oldenburg and Fairfield Porter.
In 1969 Hornak was showing in New York in group exhibitions at
Eleanor Ward's Stable Gallery and by 1970 upon the
suggestion of Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner's Nephew,
Jason McCoy (assistant director of the Tibor de Nagy Gallery), he
had entered into an exclusive contract with the Tibor
de Nagy Gallery on West 57th Street (Manhattan), a
relationship that would produce the artists first New York Solo
exhibition in 1971. Ian Hornak remained with the Tibor de Nagy
Gallery until 1977 and in 1978 chose the Fischbach
Gallery of West 57th Street (Manhattan) in New
York to be his primary gallery, a partnership that would last until
1984. In 1986 he entered into an exclusive contract with the
Katharina Rich Perlow Gallery of SoHo and latter East 57th Street (Manhattan) where
he was to remain until his death in 2002.
The artists early works were pen & ink drawings and acrylic
paintings of floating figures both clothed and nude, in addition to
an erotic art series.
In 1970 Hornak would begin to produce primarily traditional
landscapes in addition to conceptual multiple exposure landscapes in the
medium of acrylic, pen & ink and or pencil many of which the
subject matter was focused in or around the artist's residence and
studio in East Hampton, New York. John Gruen of Arts Magazine in
1975 remarked of the landscape works "Ian Hornak's paintings are
frankly dangerous. There is about them the unnerving suggestion of
the melodramatic, the lushly romantic." From 1985 until 2002 he
produced Dutch & Flemish-inspired botanical and still life
paintings with 4-6 inch painted frames where the artist would
extend the imagery of the primary painting onto the frame itself.
Author and Poet Gerrit
Henry said of these works in Art in America Magazine in 1994
"Hornak's is a rather self-explanatory if not wholly tautological
postmodernism. Perhaps, though, his excesses ring true for the
approaching millennium: this is "end-time" painting that exercises
its romantic license to the fullest in its presentation of multiple
styles of the last fin de siecle - naturalist, symbolist,
allegorical, apocalyptic." Also throughout his career he produced a
large number of figurative paintings and drawings which were
generally portraits of family, friends and fellow artists, many of
them affiliated with the New York School including Tibor de Nagy, Leonard Bernstein and Virgil Thomson.
Throughout his career Ian Hornak's instruments of choice were the
brush, pencil and pen; never did he resort to the creation of mixed
media works or employ the use such devices as the airbrush. The
artist would often cite the Hudson River School Artists as
major influences, especially Martin Johnson Heade and Frederic Edwin Church in addition
to Nineteenth-Century German Romantic Artist, Caspar David Friedrich. Ian
Hornak would suffer an aortic aneurysm on November 17, 2002
while painting in his studio in East Hampton, New York.
Though Hornak was immediately rushed to the Southampton Hospital in New York
and surgery was performed to repair the aorta, he died on December 9, 2002 as a result of
complications from the surgery. He was 58 years old.
In 2007 Ian Hornak's personal papers and effects were inducted
into the Smithsonian Institution's
Archives of American Art.
The official United States representative of the Ian Hornak
Foundation is Galleries Maurice Sternberg located in the John
Hancock Center, 875 North Michigan Avenue, 25th Floor, Chicago, Illinois 60611
USA.
Selected
statements by art critic's and historians
- "Not since the Hudson River School glorified the grandiose
panorama of the natural world in meticulous detail has an American
artist embraced landscape painting with the artistic totality of
Ian Hornak." - Marcia Corbino, "Hornak Exhibit: Landscapes At Their
Best," Sarasota Herald
Tribune, March 7, 1980.
- "He [Ian Hornak] is right at the top of the list of
romantically descriptive painters today." - John Canaday, New York Times, January 12, 1974
- "Given his creative guidelines, Hornak has admirably succeeded
in producing an imagery at once visionary and hauntingly intimate.
It is personal painting that colors memory, and stays fixed in the
mind." - John Gruen, "Ian Hornak's Personal Painting,"
Arts Magazine, February 1976
- "Odds are 10,000 to one against a young artist surviving in New
York on painting alone. But former Detroiter Ian Hornak has been
doing so… More than surviving, this painter who just turned 30 has
been living comfortably in a studio apartment on 73rd Street and in
a weekend home on Long Island. Collectors wait in line for Hornak's
landscape paintings since his third one man show sold out at New
York's Tibor de Nagy Gallery." - Joy Hakanson, "He's one in
10,000," Detroit News, June 2, 1974
- "The exotic landscapes he began to paint were evocations of a
world partly inside the mind but also with a very real existence
outside related to color photography and modern industrial life. I
was deeply interested in the implications of these paintings." -
Frederick J. Cummings, Director [former], Detroit Institute of Arts,
May 1974 [circulated catalogue, "Ian Hornak: New Paintings and
Drawings]
- "Successive viewings of Hornak's paintings make one sense that
the artist takes great risks and that the risks are often
successful… Without risks there is neither art nor achievement.
Hornak's recent paintings are both." -John L. Hochmann, Arts
Magazine, February 1978
Selected
quotes
- "My idea of a perfect surrealist painting is one in which every
detail is perfectly realistic, yet filled with a surrealistic,
dreamlike mood. And the viewer himself can't understand why that
mood exists, because there are no dripping watches or grotesque
shapes as reference points. That is what I'm after: that mood which
is apart from everyday life, the type of mood that one experiences
at very special moments." -Ian Hornak, The 57th Street
Review, January 1976
- "While I know that the beautiful, the spiritual and the sublime
are today suspect I have begun to stop resisting the constant urge
to deny that beauty has a valid right to exist in contemporary
art." -Ian Hornak, Cover Magazine 1994
- "What I so like about Poussin and Cézanne is their sense of
organization. I like the way in which they develop space and shape
in architectural continuity - the rhythm across their paintings.
When I paint a landscape, I get the greatest pleasure out of
composing it. As I paint, I try to work out a visual sonata form or
a fugue, with realistic images." - Ian Hornak, Sneed Gallery
Catalogue (circulated) 1976
Selected studios and
residences
- 116 East 73rd Street (penthouse), New York City, New York
11234. Ian Hornak's New York City studio and residence. Years
active: 1968-1985.
- Hands Creek Road, East Hampton, New York 11937. Ian Hornak's
primary residence and studio. Years active: 1970-2002.
- 33 Main Street, East Hampton, New York 11937. Ian Hornak's
administrative offices and horticultural design studio. Years
active: 1976-1984 (currently owned by Ralph Lauren).
- 7193 Pine Glen Court, Sarasota, Florida (P.O. Box 34) 33583.
Ian Hornak's winter studio and residence. Years active:
1985-2001.
Selected solo
exhibitions
- Tibor de Nagy Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1971
- Jacobs Ladder Gallery, Washington D.C.: 1971
- Tibor de Nagy Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1972
- Jacobs Ladder Gallery, Washington D.C.:1973
- Tibor de Nagy Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1973
- Gertrude Kasle Gallery, Detroit,
MI: 1974
- Tibor de Nagy Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1974
- Tower Gallery, Southampton, New York: 1974
- Tibor de Nagy Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1975
- Watson-de Nagy
Gallery, Houston, TX: 1975
- Tibor de Nagy Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1976
- Sneed Gallery, Burpee Art Museum of Rockford, IL: 1976
- Tibor de Nagy Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1977
- A.J. Wood Gallery, Philadelphia, PA: 1979
- John Pence Gallery, San Francisco, CA: 1980
- Fischbach Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1977
- Fischbach Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1979
- Fischbach Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1981
- Marie Selby Botanical
Gardens and Museum of Botany and Art, Sarasota, FL: 1981
- Fischbach Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1983
- The Gallery of Western Carolina
University, Cullowhee, NC: 1984, (Retrospective of portraits
and landscapes on paper)
- Armstrong Gallery 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1985
- Benton Gallery, Southampton, New York: 1988
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery SoHo, New York, New York: 1988
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery SoHo, New York, New York: 1990
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery SoHo, New York, New York: 1992
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery SoHo, New York, New York: 1994
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery SoHo, New York, New York: 1996
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery, Fuller Building, East 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 1998
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery, Fuller Building, East 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 2000
- Katherina Rich Perlow Gallery, Fuller Building, East 57th Street (Manhattan), New
York, New York: 2002
- Galleries Maurice Sternberg, John Hancock Center, Chicago, IL:
March-April 2009 ("Light From the Past: Ian Hornak, A
Retrospective")
- Upcoming Solo Exhibition: Galleries Maurice Sternberg, John
Hancock Center, Chicago, IL: May-June 2010
Selected
bibliography
- Chris Miller, "Review: The Big Picture Show/Galleries Maurice
Sternberg," Newcity Art, Aug. 10, 2009
- Sara Herbert-Galloway, "Southampton's Star Studded Benefit:
Southampton Hospital Celebrates 100 Years Of Healing," The Insider,
Aug. 04, 2009
- Susan Saiter, "A Hospital Born from Two Surgeons in an Attic,"
Dan's Papers, July 10, 2009
- Chris Miller, "Review: Ian Hornak/Galleries Maurice Sternberg,"
Newcity Art, April 20, 2009
- Alan Artner, "Alan Artner's Gallery Roundup," Chicago
Tribune, April 17, 2009
- "Light From The Past: Ian Hornak, A Retrospective," Galleries
Maurice Sternberg, March 2009 (Circulated Catalogue)
- "The Art Scene: Ian Hornak Retrospective," East Hampton Star, Oct. 14, 2008
- Paul Varnell, "Art in bloom: Fall art exhibits feature wide
range of genres," Chicago Free Press, Sept. 8, 2008
- Stephanie Cash, David Ebony, "Ian Hornak", Art in
America, Feb. 2003
- "Ian Hornak", Washington
Post, Jan. 1. 2003
- "Ian Hornak", Philadelphia
Inquirer, Dec. 31, 2002
- "Ian Hornak", Dallas Morning
News, Dec. 31, 2002
- "Ian Hornak", Milwaukee Journal
Sentinel, Dec. 31, 2002
- "Ian Hornak", Amarillo Globe
News, Dec. 31, 2002
- "Ian Hornak", Saint Paul
Pioneer Press, Dec. 31, 2002
- "Ian Hornak", The State, Dec. 31,
2002
- "Artist Ian Hornak", Victoria Advocate, December 31,
2002
- "Ian Hornak", Associated Press, Dec 30,
2002
- Ken Johnson, "Ian Hornak, 58, Whose Paintings Were Known for
Hyper-Real Look", New York Times,
Dec. 30, 2002
- "Ian Hornak, 58; Painter Was Known for Photo-Realism Style",
Los
Angeles Times, Dec. 20, 2002
- Morgan McGivern, "Ian Hornak, East Hampton Painter", East Hampton Star, Dec. 19, 2002
- Edward Albee,
Constance Ayers, Helen Harrison, Hamptons Bohemia: Two
Centuries of Artists and Writers on the Beach
(Chronicle Books, April 1, 2002 [Hardcover])
- "Ian Hornak: A perfusion of color", Florida Design
Magazine, Volume 1-2, June-Aug, 2001
- Kay Kipling, "The Hamptons", Sarasota Magazine, Feb 1,
2001
- Phyllis Braff, "The Artistry of Getting Into Costume", New
York Times, Nov 12, 2000
- John Ashbery
Karen Wilkin, Tibor de Nagy: The First Fifty Years,
1950-2000 (Tibor de Nagy 2000 [Paperback])
- Gerrit Henry,
"Ian Hornak: Reverence and Reverie," November 1999 (Circulated
Catalogue)
- Sheridan Sansegundo, At The Galleries, East Hampton Star, November 4, 1999
- Phyllis Braff, "Moods of the Land and Its Other Inhabitants",
New York Times, July 25, 1999
- Phyllis Braff, "What the Material Contributes to the Work",
New York Times, April 18, 1999
- Phyllis Braff, "A 20th-Century Master, and Signs of the
Season", New York Times, Feb 7, 1999
- Patsy Southgate, "Ian Hornak: Creating an Art Apart", East Hampton Star, November 11,
1997
- Jerry Gargiulo, Art Byte, The Independent, September 4,
1996
- Grace Glueck, "City Sophistication Spends The Summer on Long
Island", New York Times, July 12, 1996
- Helen A. Harrison, "Gardening Themes, Diverse Pleasures",
New York Times, June 23, 1996
- Genie Chipps Henderson, Rameshwar Das, "The Doll House" (1996
[Hardcover])
- Roger Caras, "Cats of Thistle Hill: A
Mostly Peaceable Kingdom" (Fireside July 1, 1995 [Paperback])
- Readers Digest [back cover image &
feature article], July 1994
- Gerrit Henry,
Art in
America, July 1994
- Paul Cummings, Dictionary of Contemporary American
Artists (Palgrave Macmillan; 6th edition June 15, 1994
[Hardcover])
- Leslie Ava Shaw, "The Sanity of Absolute Beauty",
Cover Magazine, Feb. 1994
- "Drawing on Friendship, Portraits of Painters and Poets,"
The New
Yorker, Jan. 31, 1994
- Hilton
Kramer, "De Nagy, Secret Banker Charmed Bohemians," New York Observer, Jan. 17, 1994
- "Folk Art by Loustau", The Press of Atlantic
City, Jan 9, 1994
- Linda Southwood, "Love in a Pencil Line," The Westside
Resident, Jan., 1994
- "West art & the law: annual exhibition: an exhibition of
work by contemporary artists interpreting the law and society in
our
times" (West Publishing Company, Saint Paul, MN 1993
[Paperback])
- Rose Slivka, East Hampton
Star, Dec. 2, 1993
- "West art & the law: annual exhibition: an exhibition of
work by contemporary artists interpreting the law and society in
our
times" (West Publishing Company, Saint Paul, MN 1992
[Paperback])
- Phylis Braff, New York Times, Dec. 13, 1992
- "West art & the law: annual exhibition: an exhibition of
work by contemporary artists interpreting the law and society in
our
times" (West Publishing Company, Saint Paul, MN 1990
[Paperback])
- Ian Hornak, "Birds on Canvas", Bird Talk Magazine,
August, 1990
- "West art & the law: annual exhibition: an exhibition of
work by contemporary artists interpreting the law and society in
our
times" (West Publishing Company, Saint Paul, MN 1989
[Paperback])
- Robert Long, Four Painters and a Sculptor at the
Benton, Southampton Press, Aug. 11, 1988
- Joan Altabe, "Modern Artist Draws Inspiration from Old
Masters," Sarasota Herald
Tribune, May 22, 1988
- Steven Chrzanowski, "Ian Hornak: A modernist tied to the past,"
HAMPTONS Newspaper/Magazine, July 17, 1987
- Dennis Longwell, "Masquerading as works of art," East Hampton Star, October 16, 1986
- Alvin Martin, "American Realism- 20th Century Drawings and
Watercolors" (San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art in
association with Harry Abrams, Inc., Washington D.C., 1983
[Paperback])
- David L. Shirey, "Glimpses of Whats Current", New York
Times, June 20, 1982
- Helen A. Harrison, The New York Times, June 11,
1982
- Frank H. Goodyear, Contemporary American Realism Since
1960 (New York Graphic Society 1981 [Hardcover])
- "to the Editor: 'Happiest Times,' 'Spacious Attack,'
'Vendetta,'" East Hampton Star, Oct. 2, 1980
- "to the Editor: 'Amateur Critic,' 'Thus Rests...,' 'A Perfect
Eye,' East Hampton Star, Sept. 25, 1980
- "to the Editor: 'Artistic Meal,'" East Hampton
Star, Sept. 18, 1980
- Peter
Schjeldahl, "33 Artists Offer 33 Views of Realism", New
York Times, April 13, 1980
- Marcia Corbino, "Hornak Exhibit: Landscapes At Their Best,"
Sarasota Herald
Tribune, March 7, 1980
- Gerrit Henry,
Art in
America, Feb., 1980
- "New York realists 1980," (catalogue) Thorpe Intermedia
Gallery, Sparkill, New York 1980
- Victoria Donohoo, The Philadelphia
Inquirer, June 3, 1979
- David L. Shirey "Guild Hall Displays Landscape's Lure", New
York Times, Jan 14, 1979
- Jean Kemper Hoffmann, "Palette to Palate, The Hamptons Artists
Cookbook," (A Guild Hall Museum Book; Times Books 1978
[Hardcover])
- John T. Elton, Romanticism in Painting, Humphrey
Milford/Oxford University Press, New
York, 1978
- Helen Harris, "The New Realists", Town & Country,
Oct. 1978
- Joy Hakanson Colby, "Painting in the Big Apple," Sunday News
Magazine, Detroit News, September 18, 1978
- David L. Shirey, "More Real Than Real", New York
Times, Aug 6, 1978
"Artists of Suffolk County," (catalogue)
Heckscher Museum, September 22, 1978
- "Long Island This Week", New York Times, July 23,
1978
- "Aspects of realism," (catalogue) Guild Hall, East Hampton July
22, 1978
- John Hochmann, "Wordsworth in the Tropics and Hornak's
Painting", Arts Magazine, Feb. 1978
- Anne Sargent Wooster, Art News, Jan. 1978
- Vivien Raynor, "Representation Is Alive in SoHo", New York
Times, Dec. 30, 1977
- Ann Barry, "Arts and Leisure Guide", New York Times,
Oct. 30, 1977
- Ann Barry, "Arts and Leisure Guide", New York Times,
Oct. 23, 1977
- Mary Lou Kelley, "At Dartmouth College," The Christian Science
Monitor, August 18, 1977
- Julian Weissman, Art News, March 1976
- John Gruen, "Ian Hornak's Personal Painting", Arts
Magazine, Feb. 1976
- "Arts and Leisure Guide", New York Times, Jan. 4,
1976
- Norman Lombino, "Interview", The 57th Street Review,
Jan. 1976
- C. Greene, "Critique, Editor," East Hampton
Star, September 1, 1975
- "Hornak paintings add interest to two areas," Ohio Citizens
Trust Co. Tempo Magazine, April 1975
- John Gruen, The Soho News, Jan. 1975
- David Bourdon, The Village Voice, Jan. 20,
1975
- "Arts and Leisure Guide", New York Times, Jan. 19,
1975
- "Arts and Leisure Guide", New York Times, Jan. 12,
1975
- Gregory Battcock, Super Realism: A Critical Analogy
(E.P. Dutton and Co., New York, 1975 [Paperback])
- Joy Hakanson, "He's one in 10,000", Detroit News,
June 2, 1974
- Jack Mitchell, "The Artist as a Subject", Arts
Magazine, Jan. 1974
- John Canaday,
The New York Times, Jan. 12, 1974
- John Scarborough, Houston Chronicle, May 27,
1974
- Frederick Cummings, [circulated catalogue] "Ian Hornak: New
Paintings and Drawings", May 1974
- "Ian Hornak," ARTnews, March 1974
- Judith Van Baron, Arts Magazine, March 1974
- "Opening Saturday," East Hampton
Star, January 3, 1974
- "What's New in Art; In the Galleries", New York Times,
Dec. 30, 1973
- "Art Shows", Washington
Post, June 1, 1973
- "Georgica Pond at Sunset," East Hampton
Star, May 24, 1973
- Paul Richard, "Major Influence, Minor Artist", Washington Post, May 24, 1973
- "Stage", Washington Post, May 18, 1973
- Gregory Battock, Art and Artists, Feb. 1973
- Jo Ann Lewis, "Seeing is Believing," Washington Evening Star, April 28,
1972
- Painting and Sculpture Today, The Contemporary Arts Society and
Indianapolis Museum of Art
(Indianapolis, 1972)
- Phyllis Braff, "From the Studio," East Hampton Star
November 4, 1971
- "A Tree is a Tree, Hornak Works His Canvas in Romantic
Realism," The Herald-Time Off, Oct. 24, 1971
- Joy Hakanson, The Detroit News,
Oct. 10, 1971
- Jack Mitchell, "Portrait of an artist as a contemporary," After Dark Magazine, May 1971
- Frank Getlein, The Evening Star, Washington D.C., May
12, 1971
- Sarah Booth Conroy, "Realism Back In Art", Washington Post, May 17, 1971
- "Printmaking in Retrospect 1946-1984," (catalogue) Wayne
State University, November 20, 1964
- Who's Who in American
Art
- Who's Who in the
East
Ian Hornak's artworks are owned by the following public
collections
- Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art, Saint Joseph, Missouri
- Allen Memorial Art Museum,
Oberlin, Ohio [1]
- Austin Museum of Art, Austin, Texas [2]
- Canton Museum of Art, Canton, Ohio [3]
- Corcoran Gallery of Art,
Washington D.C. [4] [5]
- Dartmouth College: Hood Museum
of Art, Hanover, New Hampshire [6]
- Detroit Historical Museum,
Detroit, Michigan
- Galleria Internazionale, Milan, Italy
- Guild Hall, East Hampton, New York [7] [8]
- Karmanos Cancer Institute: Wayne State University, Detroit,
Michigan
- Kinsey Institute for Research in Sex, Gender
and Reproduction, Bloomington, Indiana
- Museum of Fine Arts,
Boston, Massachusetts
- Ringling College of Art
and Design, Sarasota, Florida
- Rockford Art Museum, Rockford, Illinois [9]
- Rutgers University: Jane Voorhees Zimmerli
Art Museum, New Brunswick, New Jersey
- St. Mary's University,
Texas, San Antonio, Texas
- Smithsonian Institution:
Archives of American Art, Washington D.C.[10]
- University of
Maryland, College Park: Art Gallery University of Maryland,
College Park, Maryland
- University of Texas at
San Antonio, San Antonio, Texas
- Vassar
College: Frances Lehman Loeb Art
Center, Poughkeepsie, New York
- Washington County
Museum of Fine Arts, Hagerstown, Maryland [11]
- Wayne State University Art
Collection, Detroit, Michigan
External
links
Sources
- [12]New York
Times; "Ian Hornak, 58, Whose Paintings Were Known for Hyper-Real
Look;"
December 30, 2002; written by KEN JOHNSON (NYT); The
Arts/Cultural Desk Late Edition - Final, Sect. A, p. 15.
- [13]Art In America,
Ian Hornak at Katharina Rich Perlow - New York, New York, Author
Gerrit Henry, July 1994
- [14] East Hampton
Star, Creating An Art Apart: Ian Hornak, Author Patsy Southgate,
November 20, 1997
- [15] Alan Artner,
"Alan Artner's Gallery Roundup," Chicago Tribune, April 17,
2009
- [16]Smithsonian
Institution: Archives of American Art: Ian Hornak papers,
1955-1991
- [17] Smithsonian
Institution: Archives of American Art (images of Hornak
catalogue)
- [18] Smithsonian
Institution: Archives of American Art (images of Ian Hornak's
Passport)
- [19] Wayne State
University: Department of Art & Art History Alumni Profiles
(Ian Hornak 1944-2002)
- [20] Art in
America, Feb 2003, Ian Hornak Obituary
- [21] Ian Hornak,
58; Painter Was Known for Photo- Realism Style, Los Angeles Times,
December 20, 2002
- [22] Ian Hornak
(page 10), Expressions Magazine, Wayne State University 2008
- [23] Chris Miller,
"Review: Ian Hornak/Galleries Maurice Sternberg," Newcity Art,
April 20, 2009
- [24] Getty Research Institute, Los
Angeles: Union List of Artist Names - Record for "Hornak, Ian"
- [25] Smithsonian
Institution: Archives of American Art, "Gallery announcement for an
Ian Hornak exhibition at the Sneed Gallery, ca. 1976."