A painter and illustrator, Tom Everhart was a close friend of cartoonist Charles Schulz and is the only person authorized by Schulz to use characters created by the cartoonist in his own work. To... Read full biography
A painter and illustrator, Tom Everhart was a close friend of cartoonist Charles Schulz and is the only person authorized by Schulz to use characters created by the cartoonist in his own work. To commemorate the loss of his friend, Everhart painted "The Tear", that shows Snoopy shedding a tear for... Read full biography
A painter and illustrator, Tom Everhart was a close friend of cartoonist Charles Schulz and is the only person authorized by Schulz to use characters created by the cartoonist in his own work. To commemorate the loss of his friend, Everhart painted "The Tear", that shows Snoopy shedding a tear for the loss of his creator, Charles Schulz. Everhart painted the work on two life-sized wooden doors without handles, showing "the lack of control over the moment. Doors open and close, we enter and exit... Read full biography
A painter and illustrator, Tom Everhart was a close friend of cartoonist Charles Schulz and is the only person authorized by Schulz to use characters created by the cartoonist in his own work. To commemorate the loss of his friend, Everhart painted "The Tear", that shows Snoopy shedding a tear for the loss of his creator, Charles Schulz. Everhart painted the work on two life-sized wooden doors without handles, showing "the lack of control over the moment. Doors open and close, we enter and exit through them everyday, much like when we enter into a new period of our lives", said Everhart. Source:. "Art Business News", February 2005... Read full biography
A painter and illustrator, Tom Everhart was a close friend of cartoonist Charles Schulz and is the only person authorized by Schulz to use characters created by the cartoonist in his own work. To commemorate the loss of his friend, Everhart painted "The Tear", that shows Snoopy shedding a tear for the loss of his creator, Charles Schulz. Everhart painted the work on two life-sized wooden doors without handles, showing "the lack of control over the moment. Doors open and close, we enter and exit through them everyday, much like when we enter into a new period of our lives", said Everhart. Source:. "Art Business News", February 2005... Read full biography
Tom Everhart - Artist Info
About Tom Everhart: Books
Books & Publications (1)
Publications based on askART research. List may not be comprehensive.
The Artists Bluebook 34,000 North American Artists to March 2005
2005
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