Allan R. Banks' vision and progressive nature may be seen in works ranging from portraiture, garden paintings, and interiors, as well as in major figure works at the studio or in plein air. Stylistically, Banks relates most closely to the naturalist painters of nineteenth-century France, particularly Jules Bastien-Lepage, the naturalist movement's chief proponent and greatest practitioner.
“Banks' own works show his technical prowess in characterizing the human figure as well as in a keen sensitivity for recording the evanescent quality of atmosphere and outdoor light. His skillfully wrought canvases mark him not only as a talented craftsman, but as a link in the great chain of naturalist painters.”
— American Artist Magazine
"With outstanding draftsmanship, Banks' paintings are at once harmonious and vivacious and, whether portraying his subject in dappled sunlight or in the luminous light of dusk, they are studded with fragments of light that eternally preserve them. His canvases reveal reflective figures as if one were discovering the innermost private moments of his subjects."
— Robert Stenstrom, Fine Art Dealer
"He's one of the best, if not THE best, out-of-door figure painters using natural color. It's important to understand the tradition he comes from, and how very few people are accomplished in that area."
— Richard F. Lack, Artist/Author
other artist: Maxfield Parrish Paintings George Owen Wynne Apperley Paintings childe hassam Paintings Frida Kahlo Paintings