John Hershey Fine Art

John Hershey Fine Art 🎨 Painter / Photographer / Architect 📸
🏞️ Abstract Expressionism | Figurative
👨🏻‍🎨 Shop Fine art prints at
👉 www.johnhersheyfineart.com

John Hershey is a painter, photographer, designer, and architect. As an architect he has designed custom homes for 100s of clients throughout the United States. Working primarily in bold abstract expressionism, my paintings presents a dialogue between structure and spontaneity. I am drawn to the interplay of color, form, and texture—often layering geometric elements with organic shapes to create v

isual tension and harmony. My process is intuitive, allowing each piece to evolve through a series of decisions that balance order with unpredictability. I am excited by the way abstraction can convey complex emotional states and relationships without relying on literal representation. Influences from modernist abstraction and contemporary color theory inform my approach, but I am equally inspired by personal experiences and the subtle dynamics of human connection. Whether through rhythmic grids, relationship of shapes, or expressive depictions of figures, my work reveals the energy and intimacy found in everyday moments. Texture and brushwork are central to my practice, inviting viewers to engage not just visually but also viscerally. Each composition is an exploration—an attempt to express the layered, sometimes chaotic, always meaningful nature of life and relationships. The artwork throughout this site has been created to call forth certain emotions of the viewer. These pieces can be enjoyed in your home or place of business. My art business has been designated as a "Trusted Art Seller" with The Art Storefronts Organization, which means you can shop with confidence, and know that I stand behind the quality and value of my products.

When people move house, they make a hierarchy without realizing it. Some things get donated, some get stored, some make ...
06/19/2026

When people move house, they make a hierarchy without realizing it.

Some things get donated, some get stored, some make the journey regardless of whether they make logical sense in the new space.

Art almost always travels. It is rarely the practical choice that moves with you. It is the things that meant something. Has that been true for you?

What have you moved more than once, and would "Black main times two" make that list?

https://www.johnhersheyfineart.com

People sometimes feel they need to be able to articulate why they want a particular work before they are allowed to buy ...
06/17/2026

People sometimes feel they need to be able to articulate why they want a particular work before they are allowed to buy it. That is not how it works.

The attraction does not need a defense. You do not have to be able to explain Sailboat docked at sunset to someone who asks; you just have to know it belongs in your space.

The explanation, if you want one, tends to arrive later on its own.

https://www.johnhersheyfineart.com

Every work that reaches a collector is the result of many decisions, including the decision not to show what came before...
06/16/2026

Every work that reaches a collector is the result of many decisions, including the decision not to show what came before it.

The finished work is not the whole story. It is the end of a longer, quieter process that most collectors never see.

When you live with La Sal Mountains, you are living with the result of the artistic process and all that comes with it.

https://www.johnhersheyfineart.com

Interior designers often talk about sightlines. They're the natural path your eye travels when you enter or move through...
06/12/2026

Interior designers often talk about sightlines. They're the natural path your eye travels when you enter or move through a room.

Most people never think about this consciously, but they feel it. Art placed directly in a sightline changes a room immediately.

Placement is as intentional as the work itself.

Where would you put Yellow Blue Reflections #1?

https://www.johnhersheyfineart.com

A lot of people hold off on collecting art because they rent and feel uncertain about committing to walls they do not ow...
06/10/2026

A lot of people hold off on collecting art because they rent and feel uncertain about committing to walls they do not own. But art does not belong to a wall. It belongs to you.

Renting is not a reason to live with bare walls. It is a reason to collect work that matters enough to keep moving (and growing) with you.

"Race in the Med 5" and my other work are connected to the people who love them, not just the places they're displayed.

https://www.johnhersheyfineart.com

Address

Chagrin Falls, OH

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