ALEX HOFGREN
| Acrylics | Website: AlexHofgren.com E-mail: wildwood@shentel.net |
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"For me, art
is an intellectual exercise in learning – learning to see, to
feel, to understand shapes and colors, and to develop the skills to
recreate what I have experienced. Each painting or piece of art is a
discovery. Sometimes the art is based on something I have seen, but to
me the more interesting art is based on a feeling or an idea."
Alex Hofgren was born and grew up in Miami, Florida, as the only
child of two English parents. Her mother was a magazine editor and her
father was a marine scientist. Books, literary conversation and
intellectual curiosity were a big part of home life. Her father loved
to tinker with things. He built hi-fi sets, lawn sprinkler systems,
bookcases, and a variety of other objects. Saturday afternoons were
spent at Poe’s hardware store, where Alex wandered past bins of
pipe fittings, mechanical parts, screws, nails, gaskets and so on,
wondering what they were all used for. Sundays were spent sailing.
Upon graduating from high school, Alex went to Sarah Lawrence College
in Bronxville, New York, where she studied art and literature, and
learned how to weld. After college she got a job in New York City,
first as a ghostwriter, then as an assistant editor on Sportfishing
magazine. Then she got married and moved to Washington, where her
husband was involved in politics and social life. The arts were put on
hold for a while, and Alex learned to cook, raise a son and speak
Spanish.
When Alex finally had time for herself again, she took classes at the
Corcoran School of Art and became a portrait painter. Then her marriage
dissolved and she became a real estate broker to pay the bills. She
bought a small house in New Market, thinking that she could come out to
the country and paint in her spare time, but the house was barely a
shell, and had to be substantially renovated. So Alex learned how to do
plumbing, electrical, carpentry, installing windows and painting roofs,
not to mention jacking up the floor to replace some sill plates. It was
hard work, but interesting. Washington no longer seemed so important,
so she sold her house there and bought some rental property in
Shenandoah County. She doubled the size of her house, and while she was
still working on that, taught art for a while at the Seventh Day
Academy in New Market.
Alex is currently teaching two different classes a week at The Art
Group, and working on her own art full time. She also breeds and trains
Mountain Pleasure horses.





