Gary
minored in art and majored in English at San Jose State
University, with the intention of becoming a suffering writer.
Upon earning his BA, he entered a field with, he would soon
discover, far more potential for suffering. He started teaching.
He admits that his first year was a disaster. Following
that year, he delivered milk to the homes of his students’
families and their neighbors, but he also learned of a dream
job.
In
1964, he applied for and got a position with the Department
of State Diplomatic Courier Service to be stationed in Frankfurt,
Germany. He accompanied top secret materials to virtually
every capital city in Europe, Africa and the Middle East.
Whereas teaching offered very little time to paint, the
courier job made it available, there often being a week
or two of free time between trips. It also opened opportunities
to see great accomplishments in art in amazing museums and
galleries. He treated himself to an on location study of
art history and appreciation.
After
2 ˝ years of living the Cold War and witnessing Africa’s
bloody emergence from colonialism, Mr. Coleman headed off
to Paris where he was accepted into the prestigious Beaux
Arts to study drawing and painting. This period in Paris
would become especially important to his life, as he would
meet the woman who would become his wife.
Karoline,
from the German Alps, and Gary, married since 1968, live
today in San Jose, CA, and have two grown children.
Gary
retired from teaching in San Jose (and for two years in
Brussels, Belgium) in 1998. At first he was preoccupied
with the idea of producing a body of work that could be
recognized as his own, but as he painted more, he found,
to his relief, that he was just becoming Gary Coleman naturally.
His rolling California hills and other landscapes that thrive
on inspired use of color over a superstructure of well thought
out composition are now recognized by many art lovers in
his South Bay Area environment.
While
he continues to experiment with color and composition, he
does so within his own artistic skin. Skin allows for expansion.
Since
1998, Gary has won more than 20 show ribbons, including
1st, 2nd, and 3rd place prizes, in local shows.
In
2001 he had a one man show entitled “The Artist as Landscape”
at the Pacific Art League in Palo Alto. Praised for both
its use of humor and its artistic merit, the show was comprised
of paintings depicting what the artist saw of his self without
the use of reflective technology.
For
one three-month period in 2004, he was the featured artist
for the Palo Alto First Friday Art Walks, and until recently
was represented by the now defunct Sobi Gallery in Burlingame.