Joan Levy Hepburn has been making art and music since early childhood.
Born in 1954 in Louisville, Kentucky, a three-month-old budding artist moved to a suburb of New Haven, Connecticut, where her father began his career as a Neurologist at Yale University.
The choice to attend Buxton School in Williamstown, Massachusetts would prove to be a life-altering decision.
By the time Joan arrived at Buxton, she was already a seasoned painter. She met Willem de Kooning when he visited the school and admired one of her paintings hanging on the wall in the dining room. They shared an instant chemistry through painting and he became her personal mentor for the rest of his life. De Kooning warned against the traps of academic art education. After high school, Joan made regular trips for a few years to de Kooning’s studio to learn from him. Then, he guided her through accelerated college art degrees at Rhode Island School of Design and Kansas City Art Institute. He had disdain for closed-minded classifications. He referenced the entire gamut of art history in a non-linear path to be borrowed as needed. As he said, “It is all painting!” They shared an admiration for Cezanne. Joan continued to make regular visits to de Kooning's studio until he died.
Joan also found a music mentor. At the age of seven, she heard a record by Dave Van Ronk. That began her life’s journey in music, which started on her grandmother’s Gibson guitar. She played old English ballads, blues, and folk music by ear until she met Dave Van Ronk at the age of 20. She traded paintings for guitar lessons with Dave in finger style blues and ragtime music. Their mutual fascination of music and painting sparked discussions that Joan translated into color palettes. She began to see how color could communicate direct emotional and physical sensations to the audience. Since then, painting and music have been joined in her perception and creation of art.
Landscape has always been the vehicle for her expression in painting and drawing. Her favorite painters in this realm are Bruegel, Turner, Van Gogh, Cezanne, Cole, Church, Bierstadt, Hartley, Dove, and Lawren Harris. Joan has traveled to the American Northeast, Southwest, The Rockies, and the Canadian wilderness to capture the light, color and atmosphere of those places.
Joan has always used color as a means of organizing and understanding life and creating new ideas. Her intention in painting is to make a real physical experience, rather than a “picture of one.” She uses pigment as a tool to present perceptual color based on the physics of light. She has a natural color eye that is the equivalent to perfect pitch in music. In her early 20s, she co-founded an international company in color separation, specializing in high-quality color reproduction for the publication of art for museums and galleries. Since then, she has been known as “The Colordoctor.” Her work in color separation has enabled her to handle and thoroughly inspect artwork by the masters throughout human civilization. She has shared her knowledge and experience with museum curators and scholars. She also gives talks at museums and universities about her personal experiences with Willem de Kooning to promote understanding of his work.
As Albert Einstein said, “A great thought begins by seeing something differently, with a shift of the mind’s eye.” Joan lectures and teaches art classes that make people more aware of seeing. Her audience is not limited to artists. She has taught scientists and philosophers at M.I.T. and Stony Brook University to see the order and connections where the universe meets human consciousness to form new ideas and inventions.
Joan's work was represented by the Allan Stone Gallery from 1995 - 2009, until the gallery closed after Allan's death. She then painted her “Streams” series, which became a traveling exhibition. A book published in 2014 documents the “Streams” exhibition of oil paintings. The text is written by Richard Shiff, PhD - Effie Marie Cain Regents Chair in Art at The University of Texas at Austin. You may order a copy of this book by contacting Joan Levy Hepburn ([email protected]).
The "Streams" series is layered with the history of culture, the geology of the planet, memory, dream and physical reality. It was a natural progression for these paintings to evolve into the stereoscopic realm - as we see with two eyes in a dimensional world. The illusion of space extends outward between the surface of the canvas and the viewer. The size of the canvas is scaled to the human body, replicating the perceptual experience of being in Nature.
Joan’s musical career also includes playing cello. The “Streams” series is augmented by a soundtrack of her cello music and natural biophony of sounds recorded in the nature preserve at her studio in Connecticut. She began playing electric guitar in 2010 with Joe Bouchard, and they started performing together.
In 2015, Joan and Joe collaborated with CT Ballet to create “The Pool of Memory,” a ballet performance based on Joan’s painting about Mnemosyne and Zeus procreating the Muses in Hades. Joan provided the 40’ stage backdrop and costumes, and Joe and musician friend Kevin O’Neil composed the music for the CT Ballet choreography.
In 2016, a trio was formed with Joan and Joe and Albert Bouchard (both original founding members of the Classic Rock band Blue Oyster Cult). The Bouchard Brothers Band performed together for six years, culminating in a 10 show 2022 Tour of Scotland, England and France. Now Joan and Joe perform as a duo, and have also created a new band with drummer Mickey Curry (formerly of Bryan Adams, and Hall & Oates), and bassist Bobby MacDougall.
In the Fall of 2021 a dream instructed "The Color Doctor" to invent a new color wheel based on the combination of the 12 Chromatic Colors and the Circle of Fifths in music. The key to unlocking the mysterious relationship between the two systems is the Caduceus - Joan's branding symbol as the Color Doctor - superimposed over the wheel. This invention inspired the new series of abstract paintings, "Face the Music". Now it seems that her life has made a full circle, as color, music and painting are all in harmony.