Contact Us

Shop Artwork

Original Oil Paintings

Textured Replicas

Canvas Prints

16x20 Posters

Books & Calendars

Learn More >

About The Artist

Erin Hanson Biography

About Open Impressionism

Watch Videos

Press Pickups

Visit

The Erin Hanson Gallery

Exhibition Schedule

2nd Saturdays

Museum Shows

Visit Erin's Studio

For Collectors

Available Paintings

What Are Textured Replicas?

Request Free Samples

Collector Testimonials

How to Commission Artwork

Notify Me of New Works

For Artists

Artist Mentorship Program

Follow in Erin's Footsteps

Artist Q & A

Erin's Blog

Free Info Pack

Questions?

Shopping Cart


Subtotal

$0

U.S. Shipping

FREE

Promo code entered in checkout

Saved for Later






The History of The Erin Hanson Gallery

Wednesday, November 1, 2017

I thought you would enjoy the story behind the creation of The Erin Hanson Gallery.  About 8 years ago I was happily painting in my 3-car garage, located snugly in the Burbank hills with a great view overlooking Downtown Los Angeles. One day I got a knock on my door, and a city representative appeared saying that there have been reports of "too many canvases" being made on my property. The City of Burbank has a very strict policy of not allowing businesses to be run out of people's homes, and the representative told me I had 2 weeks to move every piece of paint and canvas out of my home.

Luckily I had already been eyeing this warehouse down in Glendale, across the street from my favorite breakfast spot. I had even emailed the owner to see if I could possibly have afforded it, but had decided it was far more sensible to keep my expenses down and remain painting in my garage. With this sudden encouraging push from the city, however, I decided I should be a leaseholder after all, and The Erin Hanson Gallery was born.

My first gallery and studio was 2,000 square feet, with a small gallery showroom in the front, a studio in the middle, and a warehouse in the back.  The well-known painting North Rim Hexaptych was created to cover a 6-paneled, wooden accordian wall I built to separate my warehouse from the studio. 

The Erin Hanson Gallery in Burbank California
 

While I was working here, I went to a great Expressionist exhibition at LACMA, and I fell in love with the museum's dark blue walls.  I liked the way the dark color made the gold frames pop.  I decided to paint my own gallery in this color.
 
The Orange Show
 
Three years later, after publishing a few books (which ate up most of my warehouse) and running very short on floor space, I relocated my gallery to an artist district near Downtown LA, called "Frogtown" due to its proximity to the LA River. With the sudden doubling of space, I felt like I could truly expand as an artist. For the first time, I was able to create a large collection of related paintings and release them all at once in my gallery. The first such collection was The Orange Show.
 
 
The Orange Show sign

The Orange Show displays
The high ceilings, polished concrete floors, and large skylights made my new gallery an ideal place to paint... until the summer of 2016 hit, and I discovered how hot an LA warehouse could get without air conditioning.

At the end of 2016, I decided to move to San Diego. The cooler weather beckoned invitingly, and I was looking forward to getting out of the city. I spent months looking at every available industrial property that came on the market. Since I am painter, and I wanted to paint on site, I needed my building to be zoned for industrial. The good news was that I could afford a much larger industrial space than I could a retail location. I finally settled on a pristine warehouse, 5,000-square feet, off Miramar Rd, the heart of San Diego's interior design district.  The building was 2 blocks from the 15 freeway, easy to access from North County and downtown San Diego, and only 15 minutes from La Jolla. Plus, there was air conditioning!

The best thing about this property was that it was completely gutted, and I was offered $80K in building modifications so I could build it to suit. This was a real dream come true. I spent weeks huddled over graph paper drawing detailed layout plans, making mockups in Photoshop, and measuring everything I owned to see where it would fit on my floorplan.

The final result was a brand-new Erin Hanson Gallery.  We had our grand opening in February, 2017. I kept the dark blue gallery walls, and I had two collection releases in 2017: The Coastal Show and The Super Bloom Show. I love living in San Diego; I feel much closer to nature here, and the city is drenched in natural beauty.
 

The Erin Hanson Gallery in San Diego

The San Diego gallery show

The Erin Hanson Gallery of San Diego

The Erin Hanson Gallery in San Diego storage area

Erin Hanson at the San Diego Gallery
 

What are my plans for the future? In a few years I hope to buy my own building and property. I have dreams of winding gardens and water features, tall trees shading a classical facade, with the cool ocean breeze drifting in from the Pacific. I am already sketching out building ideas and interior layouts in my spare time. I love to dream up new futures. It is the job of every artist.

- Erin Hanson

 

About Erin

ERIN HANSON has been painting in oils since she was 8 years old. As a teenager, she apprenticed at a mural studio where she worked on 40-foot-long paintings while selling art commissions on the side. After being told it was too hard to make a living as an artist, she got her degree in Bioengineering from UC Berkeley. Afterward, Erin became a rock climber at Red Rock Canyon, Nevada. Inspired by the colorful scenery she was climbing, she decided to return to her love of painting and create one new painting every week.

She has stuck to that decision, becoming one of the most prolific artists in history, with over 3,000 oil paintings sold to eager collectors. Erin Hanson’s style is known as "Open Impressionism" and is taught in art schools worldwide. With millions of followers, Hanson has become an iconic, driving force in the rebirth of impressionism, inspiring thousands of other artists to pick up the brush.