He remembered being ten years old. He was standing in a park in Chicago. He was holding a plastic kite. The string had snapped, and for a second, he felt pure, unadulterated panic, followed by a strange relief as the kite drifted away, free.
Her profound connection to French Impressionism sparked at age 16 when her father gifted her a book on the works of Paul Cézanne. Though a teenager might typically hope for a car, her father's encouragement allowed her to see past the pages and find a lifelong calling within Cézanne’s geometry, light, and landscape structures.
After an hour, Jill stepped back, breathing hard. She wiped a smudge of sweat from her forehead, leaving a streak of blue across her brow.
While Jill Steinhaus maintains an active creative profile, she is also professionally associated with Eide Bailly LLP, where she holds certifications in coaching and project management, suggesting a career that balances corporate leadership with a robust personal art practice.
She resides in Aix-en-Provence with her family. Her husband is a sculptor, and her three sons actively practice as artists, ceramicists, and filmmakers.
She refined her techniques at the Leo Marchutz School of Painting and Drawing in Aix, grounding her work in direct observation.
She has held solo exhibitions across major cultural hubs, including New York City, Chicago, Washington D.C., Paris, and Melbourne.
Upon her arrival in Aix-en-Provence, she enrolled in The Marchutz School of Fine Arts, immersing herself in the European tradition of painting en plein air (outdoors). Unlike many who visit for a season, Steenhuis became captivated by the light and spirit of Provence, choosing to make it her permanent home and creative base. 14 Years in Cézanne’s Studio: Château Noir
Her connection to Cézanne is unparalleled. For 14 years, she was one of the few artists in the world granted access to paint at Cézanne's private studio at the Château Noir . Her expertise has been formally recognized: in 2006, she served as the Cézanne specialist for the 100th-anniversary exhibition of the painter's death at the Smithsonian Institution.
Jill picked up a clean brush. She dipped it into a pot of vibrant, shocking crimson.
He remembered being ten years old. He was standing in a park in Chicago. He was holding a plastic kite. The string had snapped, and for a second, he felt pure, unadulterated panic, followed by a strange relief as the kite drifted away, free.
Her profound connection to French Impressionism sparked at age 16 when her father gifted her a book on the works of Paul Cézanne. Though a teenager might typically hope for a car, her father's encouragement allowed her to see past the pages and find a lifelong calling within Cézanne’s geometry, light, and landscape structures.
After an hour, Jill stepped back, breathing hard. She wiped a smudge of sweat from her forehead, leaving a streak of blue across her brow. jill steinhaus artist
While Jill Steinhaus maintains an active creative profile, she is also professionally associated with Eide Bailly LLP, where she holds certifications in coaching and project management, suggesting a career that balances corporate leadership with a robust personal art practice.
She resides in Aix-en-Provence with her family. Her husband is a sculptor, and her three sons actively practice as artists, ceramicists, and filmmakers. He remembered being ten years old
She refined her techniques at the Leo Marchutz School of Painting and Drawing in Aix, grounding her work in direct observation.
She has held solo exhibitions across major cultural hubs, including New York City, Chicago, Washington D.C., Paris, and Melbourne. The string had snapped, and for a second,
Upon her arrival in Aix-en-Provence, she enrolled in The Marchutz School of Fine Arts, immersing herself in the European tradition of painting en plein air (outdoors). Unlike many who visit for a season, Steenhuis became captivated by the light and spirit of Provence, choosing to make it her permanent home and creative base. 14 Years in Cézanne’s Studio: Château Noir
Her connection to Cézanne is unparalleled. For 14 years, she was one of the few artists in the world granted access to paint at Cézanne's private studio at the Château Noir . Her expertise has been formally recognized: in 2006, she served as the Cézanne specialist for the 100th-anniversary exhibition of the painter's death at the Smithsonian Institution.
Jill picked up a clean brush. She dipped it into a pot of vibrant, shocking crimson.