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Welcome to the online art gallery of internationally acclaimed marine artist Julia O'Malley-Keyes. Specializing in Original Oil Paintings of Classic Sailing Yachts, Cape Cod Landscapes and Harbors, Limited Edition Giclée Prints and Commissioned Paintings.

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Cape Cod Life Arts Edition Summer/Fall 2004

ARTIST PROFILE
Julia O'Malley-Keyes

Having lived on a ranch in New Mexico, subsequently moving down to Mexico, over to La Joya, back to the East Coast and northern New Hampshire, down to Camden, Maine, and off to Prince Edward Island, among other places, artist Julia O'Malley-Keyes notes that her childhood was never boring.

"My father met my mother at a coming-out party, and both were very interesting people. My father was a European socialite, a writer, and an avid traveler. My mother was a weaver and also a world-champion polo player. They had lots of bohemian friends. As a child, I'd meet many artists, diplomats and writers. It was very different to be brought up in such an environment," says O'Malley-Keyes.

Surrounded as she was in childhood by creative people, it didn't seem all that strange for her to pick up a paintbrush at the age of eight. "I told my parents that I wanted to paint and they bought me an easel and oil paints," she recalls. "Art was all around me. I was like a sponge sucking it all in."

Over the years, O'Malley-Keyes nurtured her lifelong passion for art in the '60s and '70s by spending a great deal of time in the thriving artist colonies of Provincetown and Greenwich Village. Over the course of eight years summering in Provincetown, she worked as a model and posed for famed painter Henry Hensche, picking up a treasure trove of valuable advice from him. "Being there at that time gave me huge exposure to lots of great people. At the time all my friends were artists, including my husband," says O'Malley-Keyes, who reveals that the success of her first husband -- also a painter -- was so intimidating to her that she hid her own paintings from him.

"The next segment of her life was filled with the pressures of corporate America. As the senior vice president of sales and marketing for an apparel corporation, O'Malley-Keyes traveled all over the Middle East, Asia, South America, and most of Europe. Because of the demanding travel schedule, she was able to paint only in her hotel room at night, an activity that "kept me sane," she says. It was not until she encountered her current husband that things changed again for O'Malley-Keyes.

"When I met him, he asked me what I wanted to do with my life--I was 50 mind you--and I told him I wanted my own gallery. He gave me every dime he had to open this gallery, all of the money he had been saving for 40 years. He's such a wonderful man. We've long since replaced that investment money," says the artist, adding that just the presence of her husband inspires her to do calming pieces.

Today, she is the owner and one of the resident artists of Day Hill Studio Fine Art in North Falmouth, where her often peaceful depictions of Cape Cod line the walls. To capture these scenes, O'Malley-Keyes paints oil on linen using a technique that infuses each landscape with a soft, luminous quality. To maintain her focus, she travels from Cape Cod to China, Moscow, and Antwerp, where she studies with master painters. "Every fall I spend two weeks in each place, studying one-on-one with a master for up to ten hours a day," says O'Malley-Keyes, who is planning another trip this coming fall. Her willingness to learn from other successful painters combined with her own creative gifts has resulted in many positive career dividends.

Numerous works by O'Malley-Keyes presently hang in private and corporate collections in the United States, Europe, Canada and the Dominican Republic. Recently, she signed on as the signature artist for Willowbend Properties in Mashpee. This upcoming Labor Day weekend, one of her paintings will appear on all of the promotional pieces for The Tanglewood Jazz Festival. "The Boston Symphony Orchestra was kind enough to commission me as the festival's signature artist," says O'Malley-Keyes, who will be on hand all weekend (September 3 - 5) for signings.

A firm believer in the adage "What goes around comes around," the artist gives a great deal to the local community. She donates at least 25 original paintings and 50 Giclées a year to charities such as the Falmouth Free Clinic, Falmouth Hospital, Falmouth Service Center, and Home for  Little Wanderers. "I give about $40,000 - 45,000 worth of art away every year," she says. "I just love doing it." - AD (Amy DuFault)

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