Bio of Jay Rolfe

 

Freedom and creativity have always been important values to Jay Rolfe. Art allows Jay Rolfe to use his melancholic artistic temperament to pursue both freedom and creativity with passion.

Jay Rolfe loved drawing and painting when he was a child. His love of art showed at university when, with a full academic load for credit, he added art history to his studies without receiving credit. Jay Rolfe’s higher education includes a short stint studying engineering at the University of Delaware, a business degree from the Wharton School, a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania Law School, and a graduate law degree from Temple University Law School.

Jay Rolfe was raised in West Chester, Pennsylvania. He married his college sweetheart, and they are still married. They have two children. Rolfe again lives in West Chester PA.

Several times in his business career, Jay Rolfe considered giving up law to pursue visual art. Rolfe created and collected visual art all the years he worked as a lawyer. He also wrote a published book and several screenplays and other books.

When Jay Rolfe had a dream of his signature style in November 2003, he felt he finally knew what he wanted to do when he grew up! Like legendary artists Henri Matisse, Wassily Kandinsky, Pierre Bonnard, and Paul Cezanne, Jay Rolfe gave up law to pursue art. The Philadelphia Inquirer described Rolfe as a “late-blooming artist [who] went outside the box.”

Rolfe is interested in art, architecture, nature, living naturally, engineering, recycling, and construction techniques. Jay Rolfe loves to experience art in everyday life through great design. The shapes and lines of architecture, sports cars, and useful items around the home are especially interesting to him.

Jay Rolfe’s art education was just like that of famous artists Paul Gauguin, Maurice Utrillo, Henri Rousseau, and Horace Pippin, he is self-taught. They didn't go to art school and didn't have prestigious apprenticeships. These self-taught artists each produced paintings that were quite creative, distinctive, and fresh, or “outside the box.” People often ask Rolfe where he gets his ideas. They come from his experience, the school of life.

For Rolfe, the beauty of a subject shines through its essence or truth. Jay Rolfe explores the essence and beauty, and seeks to transcend such contemporary issues as the nature of existence, disorientation, alienation, loneliness, unrequited love, complex relationships, conflict, unrest, war, greed, unfulfilled dreams, yearning, and boredom.

Rolfe says, “I love seeing people respond so deeply to my paintings, sometimes laughing, sometimes tearing up, sometimes transfixed.”

Artist Jay Rolfe offers hope and vision for the 21st Century. With his large, innovative Pop Art 3-D paintings on shaped stretched canvas, he transcends the pain, disorientation, depression and despair that many feel in contemporary life. The familiar images in Rolfe’s paintings, and the shape, depth, vibrant colors, and huge size of the paintings he creates, can impact the viewer and help him or her move beyond painful and depressing feelings. Beauty, humor, whimsy, and optimism suffuse Rolfe’s paintings.

Rolfe’s signature style of painting, huge Pop Art 3-D paintings on shaped stretched canvas, came to him in a dream. From that inspiration he applied diverse skills and resources from his previous experience to manifest his vision. His dramatic 3-D paintings attest to his carpentry skills, analytical mind, structural and spatial awareness, color sensitivity, and the love in his heart.

Jay Rolfe learned his carpentry skills on the job by buying a very rundown 140 year old farmhouse in the country without central heating. The widow who owned it left it vacant and unheated in the winter. She couldn’t climb the stairs to the second floor where she hadn’t been for over 20 years and where the ceiling was falling down. Jay Rolfe and his wife gutted the house down to the floor joists and rafters, and rebuilt it, replacing the roof, adding four dormers, a garage, a workshop, and four chimneys in the process.

Jay Rolfe enjoys walking in nature every day all year long. He also enjoys the experience and inspiration of beautiful places he encounters both near home and in his travels. His photographs capture nature's beauty.

 

Photos of Jay Rolfe At Work

Scroll down to see different phases of creating 3-D Shaped Stretched Canvas paintings.

 

Cutting Canvas for 6 feet long Ferrari 3-D Painting

Artist Jay Rolfe cutting canvas for his 3-D painting "Red Ferrari 250 GT SWB California Spyder" (6 feet long version).

 

Stretching Canvas for 6 foot long Ferrari 3-D Painting

The artist stretching canvas over a stretcher framework for his 3DSSC painting "Red Ferrari 250 GT SWB California Spyder."

 

Stapling Canvas to Stretcher Framework for 6 foot long Ferrari 3-D Painting

Artist Jay Rolfe stapling canvas to a stretcher framework for his 3DSSC painting "Red Ferrari 250 GT SWB California Spyder."

 

Painting 6 foot long 3-D Ferrari Painting

The artist painting "Red Ferrari 250 GT SWB California Spyder" 3-D painting.

 

Assembling "Lightning Bolt" Painting

Artist Jay Rolfe assembling "Lightning Bolt" 3-D painting.

 

Jay Rolfe with "Black Hole" Painting and "Duchamp At The Middle East Peace Table" Sculpture

Artist Jay Rolfe with his 3-D painting "Black Hole" and his sculpture "Duchamp At The Middle East Peace Table."