Jim Fischer
Jim Fischer is a contemporary artist based in Jersey City. A self-taught painter, Fischer began his artistic journey at the age of seven, first showcasing his work in the hallway of his elementary school, where he impressed others with his understanding of how the sky meets the earth.
Over the years, Fischer has explored a variety of artistic periods and styles. His early work focused on 'junk art,' creating sculptures from found objects. He then moved on to pastel and watercolor still lifes, representational paintings of everyday life, and copies of masterworks. His practice has since expanded to include experimental imagery, leaded glass, mosaics, furniture design and construction, garden design, and interior design.
Fischer continues to embrace a wide range of disciplines, driven by the inspiration of the moment. He firmly believes that if another person can achieve something, so can he.
Discover contemporary artworks by Jim Fischer, browse recent artworks and buy online. Categories: contemporary american artists. Artistic domains: Painting, Collages. Account type: Artist , member since 2018 (Country of origin United States). Buy Jim Fischer's latest works on ArtMajeur: Discover great art by contemporary artist Jim Fischer. Browse artworks, buy original art or high end prints.
Artist Value, Biography, Artist's studio:
Exclusive selection at discounted prices • 12 artworks
View allTwenty-four Views of Amsterdam in the Rain • 3 artworks
View allImagination: Serendipitous Realism • 184 artworks
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Serendipidous realism is the process of creating art from scraps; left over paint and scrapped dried [...]
Serendipidous realism is the process of creating art from scraps; left over paint and scrapped dried paint from the palette, and cut sections from the wiping cloths. Images are identified by association with a quote or statement proving that realism is as much imagination as real observations and that all art is a trick of the eye.
"You may discover in the patterns on the wall a resemblance to various landscapes, adorned with mountains, rivers, rocks, trees, plains, wide valleys and hills in varied arrangement; or again you may see battles and figures in action; or strange faces and costumes, and an endless variety of objects, which you could turn into complete and well drawn forms. The effect produced by these mottled walls is like that of the sound of bells, in which you may recognize any name or word you choose to imagine." Leonardo DiVinci
"You may discover in the patterns on the wall a resemblance to various landscapes, adorned with mountains, rivers, rocks, trees, plains, wide valleys and hills in varied arrangement; or again you may see battles and figures in action; or strange faces and costumes, and an endless variety of objects, which you could turn into complete and well drawn forms. The effect produced by these mottled walls is like that of the sound of bells, in which you may recognize any name or word you choose to imagine." Leonardo DiVinci
Jim Fischer
"A Short Conversation with Frank Ghery"
Collages on Paper | 6x6 in
Not For Sale
Prints
from $36.46
Portraits • 36 artworks
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Commissioned portraits.
Jim Fischer
"The Kruse Family Women: Jessica"
Conté on Paper | 15x12 in
Not For Sale
Prints
from $36.46
America's Cup Yachts • 6 artworks
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A series of paintings, oil and acrylic, of American yachts that competed in the America's Cup races. [...]
A series of paintings, oil and acrylic, of American yachts that competed in the America's Cup races. Works are based on public domain black and white photos taken of the boats engaged in racing.
Jim Fischer
"America Racing a Storm in Moonlight"
Acrylic on Synthetic board | 16x19 in
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Prints
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Imagination: Smaller Pieces • 6 artworks
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Small fragments of wiping rags.
Forty-Eight Views of Brownstone Brooklyn • 49 artworks
View allJim Fischer
"Christ Church, 1st St., Carroll Gardens/Snow Effect"
Conté on Paper | 14x9 in
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Jim Fischer
"Prospect Park Overpass in Snow, Brooklyn"
Conté on Paper | 10x7 in
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Jones Beach • 37 artworks
View allAnimal portraits • 8 artworks
View allMiscellaneous Works • 14 artworks
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Various works that don't fit anywhere else.
Jim Fischer
"4th of July, George Washington Bridge, NYC"
Conté on Paper | 14x10 in
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Prints
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Whistler's Venice Pastels Reproduced • 54 artworks
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Whistler’s Venice Pastels. To celebrate the 140th anniversary of their first being shown in London in [...]
Whistler’s Venice Pastels. To celebrate the 140th anniversary of their first being shown in London in 1879, the artist Jim Fischer has reproduced in original pastel on brown paper all 60 of Whistler’s Venice pastels. The originals are now scattered throughout the world and, because of their delicate nature, most are kept in controlled environment vaults. Many are in very poor condition. These reproductions give the viewer a chance to experience these masterpieces in their original, pristine condition as displayed by Whistler 140 years ago. Fischer's works were displayed in March 2019 at the Casa Columbo gallery in Jersey City. They are for sale individually and available for exhibition as a collection upon request.
Sold Artworks • 66 artworks
Jim Fischer
"Christ Church, 1st St., Carroll Gardens/Snow Effect"
Conté on Paper | 14x9 in
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Recognition
Published in the media
The artist has been published in the media, radio or TV press
The artist has been published in the media, radio or TV press
Editor's Pick
The artist's works have been noticed by the editorial staff
The artist's works have been noticed by the editorial staff
Presented in Art Fairs
The artist participates in art shows and fairs
The artist participates in art shows and fairs
Professional Artist
Exercises the profession of artist as a main activity
Exercises the profession of artist as a main activity
Biography
Jim Fischer is a contemporary artist based in Jersey City. A self-taught painter, Fischer began his artistic journey at the age of seven, first showcasing his work in the hallway of his elementary school, where he impressed others with his understanding of how the sky meets the earth.
Over the years, Fischer has explored a variety of artistic periods and styles. His early work focused on 'junk art,' creating sculptures from found objects. He then moved on to pastel and watercolor still lifes, representational paintings of everyday life, and copies of masterworks. His practice has since expanded to include experimental imagery, leaded glass, mosaics, furniture design and construction, garden design, and interior design.
Fischer continues to embrace a wide range of disciplines, driven by the inspiration of the moment. He firmly believes that if another person can achieve something, so can he.
-
Nationality:
UNITED STATES
- Date of birth : 1950
- Artistic domains: Works by professional artists,
- Groups: Professional Artist Contemporary American Artists

Ongoing and Upcoming art events
No data available yet
Influences
Education
1969 - 1972
Lehman College Theatre Arts
New York City,
New York,
United States
Artist value certified
No data available yet
Achievements
Solo Expositions
2023
Forty-Eight Views Of Brownstone Brooklyn
Jersey City,
New Jersey,
United States
2022
Imagination - Serendipitous Reality
Jersey City,
NJ,
United States
2019
Whistler's Venice Pastels Reproduced
Jersey City,
NJ,
United States
Activity on ArtMajeur
Last modification date : Apr 24, 2025
(Member since 2018)
Image views: 309,389
Artworks by Jim Fischer added to favorite collections: 600
Latest News
All the latest news from contemporary artist Jim Fischer
Added Jan 4, 2024
What’s On The Easel March 2022, Vol. IV, No. 3
What’s On The Easel
March 2022, Vol. IV, No. 3
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Another one ..
I’m on a roll and getting bigger. This one, titled “Reliance”, is 20” x 26”.
..And on to another.
This one, titled “Volunteer Rounding the Sandy Hook Lightboat, 1893,” will be 48” x 36”.
Besides the sailboat, there is the Sandy Hook light boat, a railroad tug and two ferries. I found models of each boat to help with colors. Stay tuned.
Two More Imagination pieces…
As usual, the painting yielded two additions to the now well over 100 pieces in the Imagination series.
They are, from left to right, “Winter Owl” and “Her New Fur Coat.”
And while we’re talking about the Imagination series…
The first showing of about 40 pieces selected from the works will be in the Casa Colombo gallery from April 2nd through 31st.
I hope those of you who can will come to the opening reception on Saturday, April 2nd. I will be sending the flier with more readable details shortly.
There’s gold in that thar’ artwork …
As reported last month, my friend, Laura, finished the relief of me. I decided to take her wonderful work up a notch and gild it. Yup, that’s 24k gold (only about $50 worth, they pound it very thin). It’s not difficult to do and, as you see, the result looks like a million bucks.
A deals a deal…
Having delivered on her end of the bargain, we have started lessons for her in painting portraits with a small, quick colored pencil piece.
We now move to oil paint, renaissance glazing technique, then finish with wet-on-wet (a quick but dicey method).
Hopefully not the last word…
That’s all for now. Be well, be safe and ‘What’s on your easel?’
Jim
Added Nov 25, 2023
Black Friday sales...
I have deeply discounted the four currently most popular works on my website. Come and take a look. (and buy one, maybe).
The Artist Jim Fischer
Added Jul 13, 2023
Virtual galleries now open...
I have opened a virtual gallery on Kuntsmatrix with the following gallery shows:
Amsterdam in the Rain: https://artspaces.kunstmatrix.com/en/exhibition/11743294/amsterdam-in-the-rain
I Am NOT A Photographer: https://artspaces.kunstmatrix.com/en/exhibition/9149100/i-am-not-a-photographer
Added Jul 20, 2022
What's on the Easel, February 2022
What’s On The Easel
February 2022, Vol. IV, No. 2
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Another one bites the dust..
I’m having fun with the nautical paintings of racing yachts. This one is titled “Vigilante Finishes First, America’s Cup, 1893.”
Evolution
The above piece evolved from several photos. The first is the black and white taken at the finishing line, the second is a nice, sunny sky with rolling clouds (which the record of the race confirms were the conditions) and the third one is a painting done by an artist around 1893 of the same boat (interestingly, his depiction is identical to the photo, he just changed the location, probably to include the British boat, Invincible, that lost the race, his painting was important to getting the rigging correct). Other photos (not shown) were essential to getting the shore line of the port at Portsmouth where the race began and ended.
Supervision…
Io has decided I need close company when painting, real close. I usually use the white canvas to my right as a test area (when I’m not using the wall or door buck) but, he has claimed the space and joins me when I paint (already stepped in the wet paint once, nor pretty, tracked all over the studio floor);
Collateral damages…
As usual, left over paint at the end of a session is put to use creating works for the Imagination series.
The first piece, “The Seven Angels of Revelation 8:2” is rather large for the series at 17” long. The second piece is titled “Stillsuit” (and, if you don’t already know what that is, you probably will soon).
As if I didn’t have enough on my plate…
I decided to open a virtual gallery, Fischer Galleries. The first exhibit is installed, called “I Am Not A Photographer” . It is a response to a good friend's corrected observation that I am not a photographer. Here’s the URL, take a look:
https://artspaces.kunstmatrix.com/en/exhibition/9149100/i-am-not-a-photographer
Want an exhibit in one of my galleries (Judy, Andrew Lisa, Jan or anyone getting this newsletter)? Email me and we can talk.
Immortalized in art…
Well, maybe not, but close. An artist friend, a sculptress, was admiring my portraits and lamenting she struggled with getting the three dimensional, sculpted look in a two dimensional painting and would I show her how? Of course, I said, and we struck up a deal, a barter. She has just delivered on her end…
Most excited to get the medallion and now we will work on my end of the deal.
And, of course, Io gets the last word…
That’s all for now. Be well, be safe and ‘What’s on your easel?’
Jim
Added Jun 20, 2022
A review of interest ...
Jim Fischer’s “Imagination” at Casa Colombo
April 8, 2022, by Tris McCall for The Jersey City Times
What does a picture of trouble look like? How does a non-figurative artist bring a feeling of danger, drama, and turmoil to the canvas? He might take a purely formal approach, and aim to provoke his viewer with clashes of color and shape: smoky grays and savage eruptions of crimson, turbulent brushstrokes, swirls and scrapes and jagged edges. Or he might affix text to his images and hang on them proper nouns meant to instill a sense of dread. Or, if he’s feeling bold, he might simply rely on the innate disquiet within the mind of the spectator. He may decide that we’re all haunted, plenty, by the times we live in. All we really need to scare ourselves silly is a little push.
Jim Fischer isn’t an abstract artist. He may be best known for his colored-pencil streetscapes of the tonier neighborhoods of Brooklyn. Very little of the prior work he’s done is unsettling. But in “Imagination: Serendipitous Reality,” his latest show, he pushes deeper into the murk and mist than he ordinarily goes. He’s returned with a series of tiny apocalypses; small canvases of happy accidents, assembled from the spillover of other artworks, massaged into monstrous shape by an inspired miniaturist with a will to spook. To make “Imagination” sing, Fischer uses all three of the techniques I described above. But he leans hardest on the third. He’s betting that you’ll be able to feel the trouble brewing in his remarkable little paintings, some barely the side of a postcard, before you even notice his methods or read the captions. Time and again, he wins that wager.
Not everything in “Imagination” is dark. There are breathy impressions of geishas in mid-dance, accidental flowers in bouquets of blossoming colors, a brilliant red “Die Fledermaus” on a tiny canvas (okay, maybe that one is a little dark). But most of the show lays Fischer’s preoccupations bare, and while the artwork is invariably pretty, the ideas sure aren’t. He gives us the Ghost of Christmas Future, the Grim Reaper, specters from the Book of Revelation, a doomed butterfly. Some of this is tongue in cheek. But a lot of it is simply a reflection of the world as it is, which, you may have noticed, is something of a mess. Fischer, returns, often, to scenes of war: the streaked ochre sky over Hiroshima, the churning Charge of the Light Brigade, the desolate trenches of WWI, coils of barbed wire and distant, menacing infantry. Joseph Stalin is namechecked; Napoleon is, too. That these little disasters were suggested to the artist by happenstance does not dull their edge one bit. In belligerent 2022, no Rorchach-test reader would fault him his fatalism.
At its best — and this excellent show sustains a high-level hover for most of its length — “Imagination” is a reminder of the explosive alchemy between words and pictures, and the uncanny way that titles work to focus and fix meaning. Technically, an image on the wall is nothing but a curved paint-smear in grey, flecked with streaks of yellow and pressed under glass. But once Fischer has named it after Dickens’s ghost, it’s impossible to see it as anything else. The wiggle in grey takes on all the properties of a specter: the hunched posture, the hooded head, the seductive, beckoning quality, the wispy menace. How much did Fischer enhance the original accident? Does it matter?
“Imagination” will hang at IECC Casa Colombo (380 Monmouth) through the end of the month. While the subject matter isn’t always happy, the occasion certainly is. The exhibition is the first to be held in the pretty second-floor space in two years. Fischer is well suited to be the baptist at the gallery’s rebirth: he was the guiding force behind many of the gallery’s online activities during its period of closure, and he curated the “Imagination” show himself. But it’s his knack for revelatory storytelling that truly makes him a fit for a visual arts institution that shares a brownstone with a local history museum. This is a man who, through an amalgam of words and images, can coax a boat race out of an assembly of black lines and suggest the play of moonlight in a garden through blotches of white paint. He’s here to conjure significance where there was none — even if that significance turns out to be the stuff of nightmares.
Added Mar 31, 2022
Imagination, Serendipitous Reality at Casa Colombo gallery, Jersey City, NJ, USA
IECC CASA COLOMBO, 380 Monmouth Street, Jersey City, NJ, USA
Saturday
2
April
2022
Saturday
30
April
2022
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel, January 2022
What’s On The Easel
January 2022, Vol. IV, No. 1
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Happy New Year!
What’s on the easel…Something completely different (again)
I am at the point with the model of a racing yacht I am restoring where I needed a guide to the rigging. I found it online in an old black and white photograph which so inspired me I decided to do a painting. I found a great photo of a storm at sea for background and toned the whole thing down to get “Racing a Storm in Moonlight”.
It quickly became a favorite on my website and is a good example of how a painting can overcome some of the problems with photography. (The frame was found by Steph on the street and during restoration was able to determine it was most likely at least 250 years old, far out!)
And, of course, the Imagination series benefits from my recent works (what do you see?)...
I’ve been building up paint wiped on a rage for some time. It was now ready to reveal it’s artistic secrets. Here’s what the rag looked like, ready to be sliced and diced. What can you see?
And here’s what came out.
On the left is titled “If you surround yourself with clowns, you should not be surprised when your life begins to resemble a circus.” from a motivational speaker, Steve Maraboli (and there's a lot of secondary figures in the piece, see what you can find). On the right the title, from Revelations, is “And I saw another angel flying through the sky, carrying the eternal Good News to proclaim to the people who belong to this world.”
A new, spontaneous method to work with…
I am in the process of changing all the Imagination pieces into black frames primarily by painting found wooden frames black. At the end of each session (and each frame takes three coats) I paint out the brush and clean it (it’s acrylic paint, I run the brush under the faucet). Sooooooooo, I started taking pieces of mat board to paint out the spare paint, quickly, just a few seconds. This piece took three seconds in one continuous brushstroke (titled Sorrow).
What fun!
Sooner or later, I guess…
My exhibition of the 48 Views of Brownstone Brooklyn has, as you might expect, been delayed again. Thank you covid. It will happen sooner or later. I’ll keep you posted.
On the home front…
We have finally formalized Steph’s office. The desk is adjustable for standing and sitting, she loves it.
We have had the roof replaced, a full tear up and replace. The contractor did a great job (and only took two days). But, there was one caveat. A few days after the installation we got torrential rain. Now, our drainpipe actually runs through the center of the house from the flat roof and down into the basement floor. In order to prevent debris from falling in they stuffed some plastic into it. One problem, they forgot to remove the plug and it started to drift down the pipe,.Torrential rain = disaster in the basement as the pipe filled and overflowed. Water ran down the inner wall to the basement.
A mess. But it’s all been cleaned up now (paid for by the contractor) and we are happy with our new roof.
And, of course, Io gets the last word…
That’s all for now. Stay well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel, December 2021
What’s On The Easel
December 2021, Vol. III, No. 12
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Once again, there is nothing on the easel.
But that’s not to say I’ve been sitting on my hands. The big project was the annual holiday card and this year, as those of you who are on my list know, was something completely different (and lots of fun to do). Here it is in comic strip form:
It’s deja vu all over again …
(The following item was prepared for this newsletter. Ah, but it now appears covid has once again delayed it so, make note but don’t get your hopes up, ‘official’ notice to come soon),
My series of paintings of Brooklyn, 48 Views of Brownstone Brooklyn, was supposed to show in the Casa Colombo gallery in April of 2020. Weeeell, something got in the way. But, finally, all is not lost (we hope, given the new strain of the virus), the exhibition will be up for the month of January.
There will be an artist’s reception on January 8th and I hope that those of you who can make it will be there. So, keep your fingers crossed, official notice will be emailed at the end of this month.
Showtime!
It’s the holiday season and many art venues are doing their annual ‘small pieces’ exhibitions ( small pieces = cheaper prices = more sales is the theory) and, given the nature of my Imagination series (most are 5x7 or less), I’m in three venues.
This grouping, called ‘The Garden at Dusk’ is gone to a venue in downtown Jersey City.
Up on the rooftop…
Well, Santa should have an easier time landing on our roof this year, we just had it replaced, total tear up and rebuild, right down to the stringers. It’s very nice.
(I was planning to put a pic up of the new roof but the contractor failed to deliver one, isn’t that just like contractors, almost finished…)
Thanksgiving was with family, finally…
Left to right: Jake (Nat’s significant other), Steph, brother Rick, Juin (Ricks significant other) and Nat. Of course, I’m behind the camera (can’t leave the job to amateurs, eh).
Onward to the new year and here to welcome us all…
Yup, you got it, The Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come from Dicken’s A Christmas Carol (and part of the Imagination series) greets you (yeah, I know, that’s a grim visage but, be of good cheer, at the end even Scrooge is redeemed). And Io demands to get his two cents in, as well…
That’s all for now. Stay well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel, November 2021
What’s On The Easel
November 2021, Vol. III, No. 11
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Uncle Mike…
My uncle recently passed and his daughter, my cousin Mollie, posted a number of pics. I found the one used for this portrait irresistible and so…
I used a different technique than I usually do. I mostly use the Renaissance technique of layered glazes, pioneered by DiVinci. But this one was done in what’s called ‘wet-on-wet’ (as was Steph’s shown below). It’s a much quicker technique. This portrait took only 15 hours over five days as opposed to the glazing that takes a month. It’s also less forgiving, kinda like watercolor work. Here’s the timeline:
Of course…
The portrait gave me plenty of materials for additions to the Imagination series.
From left to right: George Washington, Red Hair Rising, Ghost of Christmas Yet To Come, and Dusk (for the full titles you will have to go to my website, www.theartistjimfischer.com).
And this one:
Called ‘The Annunciation to the Shepherds’, it’s the one-hundreth piece in the collection and, as you might expect, I have run out of room in gallery:
On to the bedroom!
A Sunday Afternoon
One Sunday afternoon, having some time on my hands, I knocked out Shani’s ‘official portrait’.
Publish or perish (I guess)
Each year the Jersey City artist's association I belong to, ProArts Jersey City, does a book of member’s works. The catch is, you have to write some poetry (or, for one year, a recipe) to go with it. This year it was a cinquain and here is my published entry, hot off the presses:
As Winter sets in…
The gardens are all cleared and prepared for the winter (except for the garlic which gets planted later this month), the furniture and statues are all stowed. So, it’s time to get back to the shipyard and hopefully finish the two ships I’m working on by Spring.
That’s all for now. Stay well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel, October 2021
What’s On The Easel
October 2021, Vol. III, No. 10
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Shipped…
The giclee printer got a workout this month, now the Kruse women portraits and a full portfolio of signed and numbered prints are all out the door and have been delivered to their respective owners.
JCAST…
A sure sign we are getting back to normal, the Jersey City Artists Studio Tour, canceled last fall, has returned. Once again I opened my studio for tours (vaccine and mask required) and had about 20 people visit (and that’s considered pretty good for a studio not in one of the big artist studio buildings downtown). Certainly good for the ego.
I also had two pieces, ‘Hiroshima” (top) and ‘No Man’s Land in the Snow’ shown at the ProArts Jersey City Gallery for the event.
And I volunteered at ProArts gallery to sit st the door for a few hours, making friends with this creative artist selling, as you might expect, cakes and cookies to the visitors.
600…
So, I got the ‘clean it out’ bug in the basement, tossing lots of stuff that’s been just hanging out in storage for the past ten years. Steph had two boxes filled with papers that she went through for me. Among them was this pile:
Unbeknown-est to me, it appears she had kept all of the email communications between us for the first two years of our relationship, starting with setting up our first date in August, 2000, 600+ pages. What’s most interesting is what happens halfway through the communications, September 11, 2001. While it may not be of any interest to anyone, I am cataloging the documents in date and time order and scanning them for posterity, or whatever.
400 …
That’s the estimated number of tomatoes produced by the garden this year and processed down to three gallons of homemade sauce (tomatoes, garlic, peppers and parsley all grown in the garden).
Under the topic ‘Theatre of the Absurd’…
You probably don’t know, but Jersey City has the most diverse ethnic population of any city in the nation. I sometimes joke that it feels like we’re living in a third world country, you just can’t figure out which one. In our little community, with a population of about 6,000, called The Western Slope, we have Indians, Pakistanis, Egyptians, Sikhs, Puerto Ricans, Equadorans, Koreans and Phillipinos and, at a whopping 17%, Caucasians (and this is just on our block). In fact, 76% of the people in our neighborhood were born abroad (and that’s not a bad thing as they are, for the most part, white collar workers in tech and healthcare with a median yearly income of $130,000).
Now, coming from where they do, some don’t understand we have rules and regulations. Like this neighbor behind us:
Want to extend your house, add a couple of rooms? Heck, just build out that old deck structure in the back, it was falling apart anyway (Lisa, show Ray this pic, he’ll love it). NOT! Needless to say, work was halted by the buildings department, an expensive lesson was had about living in America, I’m sure.
That’s all for now. Stay well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel, September 2021
What’s On The Easel
September 2021, Vol. III, No. 9
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Finished
At least phase I of the Kruse’ Women project, the actual portraits (colored pencil on paper):
This is probably the only time all ten portraits will hang together. Each portrait, along with prints of the entire set (below), will be sent to its owner.
Trickery
I did take the time to do a small PhotoShop project for a friend. He wanted what I would call a ‘whimsy’ photo of his niece and nephew (whose last name is Knight). A bit of fun.
A Visit from Ida
Of course, the big event this month was Ida. The storm dumped 9 inches of rain in two hours. The result was a raging river through our back garden that flowed onto the dek in a 15 foot long cascade. But the scary part was it began to build up against the foundation behind the house as it flowed around eventually cascading down the alley and flowing over our front steps (white water rafting, anyone?).
If it had breached the kitchen door the basement would have flooded. It came close. Unfortunately, our new lawn was covered in silt and we are now in the process of trying to save it. And then there was some collateral damage, this Opossum juvenile was found trapped under the alleyway door.
Other things …
This month’s artistic production was, and is, further limited by house chores. Besides the lawn repairs, it was time to clean the stained glass skylight (a scary job hanging over the staircase).
Other stuff stealing my time include painting the iron railings in the front, deep cleaning the hallway/stairway carpets and washing all the windows (all 22 of them, inside and out). So, for the time being I guess I am more handyman than artist.
That’s all for now. Stay well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel, August 2021
What’s On The Easel
August 2021, Vol. III, No. 8
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Inspiration
My uncle Mike passed away recently. I didn’t really know him but I do keep in touch with his daughter, Mollie. She included a photo of him in her announcement to friends he had passed and I was inspired.
The challenge will be painting like Van Gogh. The technique is called wet-on-wet, just keep painting. An interesting exercise in a technique I have only just dabbled in. We shall see.
Legacy
I have expanded on the two portraits of Kruse women, Steph’s sister Brenda and niece Heather. I have added her other niece, Beth.
And on the easel, Steph…
Five more Kruse women to go to make the full set of three generations. The plan is to give each of them their original portrait as well as a full set of the nine in a box set of prints.
Another job…
Natalie took a booth at the gift show in Javits, NYGift, and, as usual, I was drafted to do new graphics for the booth I designed a couple of years ago.
(And, yes, the booth graphic is a blow up of one of my wiping cloths from painting).
In the garden …
The garlic crop is in and curing in the basement! Now, on to the tomatoes!
Fighting back with art…
Look at what they are building behind us! It’s a monster (housing two 'luxury' condos for $800,000 each). Noting that they will be looking straight down at our garden and into our second floor windows (but, hey, that’s urban living), I decided to give design something for them to look at, a mural (a Fall project):
It’s one of my favorite Matisse paintings and will be 22 feet by 22 feet (and I’ll bet they complain about the nudity, whatever).
Retirement?
I left the corporate world 16 years ago at the age of 55 to pursue a full time art career. Now, as my friends and family are retiring from their professions, I am getting the question “When are you going to retire?” (or, even sometimes, the assumption that I am retired and just ‘amusing myself’ with art). I respond to their inquiries and assumptions with the words of the artist Christo when he, too, was asked about retirement, “Artists don’t retire, they just die.”
That’s all for now. Stay well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel July 2021
What’s On The Easel
July 2021, Vol. III, No. 7
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Finished!
And now off the easel. The background for each portrait changed three times before I settled. A lot of over
painting that will delight art historians some century from now (I can dream, can’t I).
And while I now have all this downtime …
On the left is Steph’s brother’s daughter, Heather, and on the right is Steph’s sister, Brenda. I originally planned to do these portraits in watercolor (and was not looking forward to it, very difficult) but I decided to try colored pencils. Worked out pretty well, eh.
An after-thought…
When a work is finished I frame it and put it on the wall, which means I will look at it from time to time. Sometimes, while looking, I see something new (or something to correct). In this case, Asteroids, had a white smudge in the lower right corner and I thought it might be used to enhance the effect of the image. As you can see, now the asteroid has some place to go (“Oh, no, Mr. Bill!”).
In the gardens …
The gardens are all doing great and the front perennial garden is particularly spectacular this year (as shown, I designed this garden to be viewed from the porch above which is, for the most part, how I view it).
A little help with the harvest …
NOT! Our usually ‘cute’ neighborhood groundhog decided to lunch one day in the lettuce patch. We quickly chased him away and harvested the crop for us. He came back a few days later to munch on the green beans and we are now taking appropriate steps to deter him from returning (no, we can’t shoot him although two websites said they make good eating).
And did you know: Groundhogs are also called Woodchucks. But, that name is a misnomer, they don’t chew (or throw) wood. The name is derived from the native Indian name for the animal, wuchuk, pronounced woo-chuck. (And now, you, like me, know far more than you probably thought you need to about these little creatures).
Memories…
If anything is true about our times, we certainly are being left with some interesting memories. I was recently downloading my phone’s pics and found these:
A year ago this July I had a dental emergency and needed to go to my dentist, Kenny, on the Upper East Side of Manhattan. I rode my bike to the PATH train and then from 34th Street up to 67th, planning to avoid humans as much as possible. No problem. The PATH train was empty, just me both ways for all four trips I had to make, Fifth Avenue (at 57th Street) was void of cars (a bike rider’s paradise) and, most astounding for a day in late July, peak tourist season, the plaza at Rockefeller Center was empty. Quite a sight.
That’s all for now. Stay well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added Jan 18, 2022
What's on the Easel, June 2021
What’s On The Easel
June 2021, Vol. III, No. 6
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Finally!
Yup, one day I just walked into the studio, dumped some paint on the palette and .went at it. Some of my friends have been encouraging me to keep a photo record of the progress so, here goes:
What’s left are the backgrounds. I try to choose something that will reflect the person. Here’s what’s planned.
The one for me, on the left, was easy (and an obvious choice if you look closely at the upper left window, hello Steph). The one for Rick reflects his enjoyment of the outdoors, hiking, biking, etc. (yes it’s an old picture, Rick is the kid on the left). If you look close at the last of the progressive images you can see the sketches for the backgrounds.
New additions to the Imagination series …
As you might expect, major paintings result in smaller, more spontaneous works.
From left to right, “Wotan invoking Loki, the Norse god of fire, to surround Brunhilde's rock with fire,” “Asteroid,” “The Milky Way,” and “The Grim Reaper with Dead Rabbit (The Death of Hazel),” Do not be mislead that these are accidental paintings. They are not. They are simply limited by the available paint remaining at the end of a session, but, they are developed deliberately once they begin to look like something. The names are obtained by researching what I perceive they depicted. For example, for The Grim Reaper: I googled “Grim reaper and dead rabbit” and, low and behold, there was a hit on it: At the end of the book Watership Down one of the main characters, the rabbit Hazel, is gathered by the Grim Reaper (in the form of a black rabbit) into his family.
Promoting myself in print with a surprise…
One of the features of the service I use for my archives and website, ArtMajeur, is their promotion opportunities. They have a print publication circulated primarily in Europe and I decided to put an ad in it. I was pleasantly surprised when I received a proof of the ad … it was in French. I rather like the way “The Doomed Butterfly” is translated.
Street finds, a distraction for a distraction …
One day recently Natalie noticed a house being cleaned out across from her building. Being a great seeker of ‘obtainium” (stuff recovered from the street) she went over to see what was up. In the basement she found this vintage ship model, something a teenager might do in the 1930s (kinda a vintage version of video games). It was a mess, a thick layer of dust and much of the rigging busted up. So, I am taking a break from the Volante and restoring the boat.
One of the main attractions of the model is it’s full set of meticulously made sails, with reef lines as well. It’s a nice piece that will fit in well with our Arts & Crafts decor.
“I’m ready for my close-up, Mr. DeMille” …
As you can see, Shani has adjusted to the good life of being our pet. The next portrait for the easel.
That’s all for now. Be well, be safe. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Added May 19, 2021
What's on the Easel, April, 2021
What’s On The Easel
April 2021, Vol. III, No. 4
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Same old, same old…
No need to bore you with a photo of the easel, the same two portraits are still there, untouched..
But the Rousseau clock is finished…
And as long as the acrylic paint set is out …
I’ve finally finished the last of the Jones Beach series (started in the 80s). These two small canvases, 11x7 each, had been hanging around the studio with sketches on them since the mid-90s. They are now finished, acrylic on canvas. I have re-affirmed why I prefer working in oil. Acrylics dry too fast, leaving little room to work the surface. Whatever, they are done.
Has anyone noticed they are racing the America’s Cup?
I have, well, sort of. Can you figure out how these two modernist, minimalist pieces called Racing Yachts I and II. They came about while I was painting some frames black. They are the markings left on the paper I put down on the work surface, thus, serendipitous art, another in the Imagination series.
If you haven’t yet…
Why not take a minute to visit my virtual exhibit at the Casa Colombo virtual gallery.
Here’s the direct URL: https://artspaces.kunstmatrix.com/en/exhibition/5597657/forty-eight-views-of-brownstone-brooklyn.
“Those April showers…”
Yup April is crunch time for another artistic pursuit, gardens (and if you are serious, as I am, about doing it you agree it’s an art) This year the grass needed replacing so the season has started with a new lawn.
I also had a lot of new dirt put in the raised beds, planting will begin shortly.
Kids? Nah! Cats? Yeah!
Meet the new member of our family. Her name is Shani, which is ‘Wonderful woman’ in ancient Egyptian. She was abandoned on the street (with a collar around her neck, no less) and rescued by a local involved in such. She is a pure bred, an Egyptian Mau, one of the oldest breeds of cat, dating back to before 1500 BCE. It is believe her breed was the one that spurred the ancient Egyptians to begin their cult worshiping the cat. See those dark black markings coming off the edge of her eyes? It is thought that those marking inspired the Egyptians to wear mascara in imitation, a ritual still observed by women worldwide. So, say ‘hello’ to Shani, our Egyptian princess.
That’s all for now. Be well, be safe. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Added May 19, 2021
What's on the Easel, March 2021
What’s On The Easel
March 2021, Vol. III, No. 3
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Let’s get right to it…
Trying to keep up with my goal of one portrait a month, there are two canvases on the easel (it’s a twofer, while I wait for a friend in Florida, Nicole, to send some photos for her portrait); yours truly is on the left and bro Rick on the right, waiting until one day I just walk in the studio and go at it.
What’s old is new…
The mantel clock, called The Rousseau Clock , that had been sitting around for 40 years, is coming along nicely.
It’s not the first time I have visited this theme. This mural was painted in the mid-80s in my house in Wantagh (which I was ‘permitted’ to paint after buying off my then wife, Elyse, with a fur coat). There is another small clock with this theme done in the late 70s that a friend, Stephanie, possesses.
And, finally, there is the large version, painted for my apartment in Brooklyn in the early 2000s which is now hanging in Steph’s office.
Good themes don’t die, they just get recycled. And, yes, Alan, there is a Fluck in it.
Another project is taking shape …
My interpretation of The Last Supper by DiVinci is developing. I printed out a copy and, as you can see, am putting notes on it exploring how it will be put together (in the true spirit of inspiration, most of these ‘ideas’ came to me in the wee hours of the morning, waiting until it was time to get up, that is, waiting for the sun to rise),
We are vaccinated..
Of course, being an artist and having a laminating machine available, I made little ‘V’ badges to clip onto a collar or shirt pocket, to let the world know we’re good (if you would like one just drop me a note and I’ll mail it to you).
About that ship model…
Not much to show but that’s not to say not much has been done. As I said last month, now it’s on to the long, tedious job of masts, spars and rigging, not much to show for now.
And, finally, another cartoon for your amusement
I don’t know about you, but Steph and I doodle on the kitchen calendar, here’s the entry for March 11th:
That’s all for now. Be well, be safe. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Added May 19, 2021
What's on the Easel, February 2021
What’s On The Easel
February 2021, Vol. III, No. 2
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Better…
Leonardo DiVinci wrote, “There is no such thing as ‘perfect’ but everything can be better” (that’s why he never finished the Mona Lisa). And, I have always been unhappy with the large portrait of Steph in the red coat so I decided to rework her face.
Now, that’s better. While at it, I fixed that missing thumb…
The eyes have it.
Go with me to a portrait gallery and you will see me as close to the canvas as possible. It’s the eyes, they make all the difference and, lest you think it’s easy (I know you don’t) here’s a closeup of Steph’s from the portrait. Detail, detail, detail.
A missing thumb restored...
While I was at it, I really messed up the anatomy of this hand, corrected now.
And, of course…
The portrait work fed into the Imagination series, four pieces thus far, including this (something from the red in the portrait) :
It’s called “2020 Man-of-the-Year: The Grim Reaper."
A piece being exhibited …
This is a piece of mine in a local show downtown in Jersey City. It’s called “And there was war in Heaven” from Revelations (the theme of the show is Social Injustice and how this piece fits in, beyond me but the Curator loves it). Icing on the cake, I got five seconds of fame on the local news as their final shot when covering the show. This is a screen shot from their piece:
A milestone.
The ship model has reached a milestone, the hull and deck features are now completed (four months work).
Now it’s on to the long, tedious job of masting and rigging. Probably another four months.
One small detail…
Yup, it’s a bucket, ‘bought the size of a human molar.
And who’s this handsome guy?
My good friend Johnny found this in his photo archives, it’s now one of only a handful of photos taken of me at that time, I’m 20.
And, finally, another cartoon for your amuesment (?)
Steph and I have had our first shot, free from this nightmare by the end of March. Thank God and the scientists that know best.
That’s all for now. Be well, be safe. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Added May 19, 2021
What's on the Easel, January 2021
What’s On The Easel
January 2021, Vol. III, No. 1
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
So, bare with me here…
The muse has struck. There’s this wall. Ever since we moved into the house I have been thinking about what to do on the wall at the back of the garden. It’s 26 feet long and 6 feet high.
Then, the other night we watched an old movie that just came to mind, The Horse’s Mouth starring Alec Guiness as a grouchy old artist perpetually looking for large surfaces to paint and getting into several hilarious encounters as he does so and I was reminded of that wall.
Then another old project came to mind, a re-creation of DaVinci’s Last Supper.
But mine would be different, only the faces and hands (new faces and hands), each on a canvas and arrayed across the 26 feet of the painting (ah, yes, that wall) at varying heights as required. Just the faces and the hands.
Finally, I had an Epiphany. Because the work would be made up of 29 separate smaller canvases, with appropriate layout instructions and measurements, it could be, so to say, a portable Last Supper, set up anywhere there’s 26 running feet of wall! Thus, a major ‘Living With Art’ project is born. This one is going to take a while (like the 48 Views of Brownstone Brooklyn which took,10 years). First job, find 13 faces to paint.
And if that’s not enough...
I have decided to illustrate the last book of the New Testament. Revelations, using the various techniques developed for the Imagination series. I already have The Four Horsemen and War In Heaven. And just added this one:
“I was in the spirit of the Lord’s day, and I heard behind me a great voice, as of a trumpet …”
Now what started out as just finding art in random leftovers has purpose. So, does that make it ‘art’?
A piece to be exhibited …
Difficult as these times make it for in-person art exhibitions (and, in my opinion, the online options just don’t cut it), some are still going on. Such is the case with the Rotunda Gallery in Jersey City Hall. The February theme is, since it is Black History Month, black history. I will have this piece hung in the exhibit:
It’s called They Lynched Women, Too and comes with this tag line, “If you’re not willing to die for it, put the word ‘freedom’ out of your vocabulary.” Malcolm X
A great bike needs a great helmet, eh.
Last month, if you recall, I featured my new bike, a Van Moof ebike, the Tesla of the ebike world. This month I found a helmet to do it justice, mat black like the bike, it is designed for urban riding, less aerodynamic, more robust and just cool (it even has, on the left, a hole specifically designed for slipping it onto a U lock). I added my personal logo to the front and it’s good to go.
About that ship…
Steph notes that the deck is getting a bit crowded. The captain is to give you a sense of scale.
And, finally, another in the ‘What If…” series…
What if … after supper
That’s all for now. Be well, be safe. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Added May 19, 2021
What's on the Easel December 2020
What’s On The Easel
December 2020, Vol. II, No. 12
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
Odds and Ends
Yup, I’m still waiting for a ‘big idea’ but there are some things ‘on the easel’.
I am sure every artist has unfinished pieces and projects just hanging around the studio and I’m no different. So, while I diddle around on deciding on a new project, I gathered the older ones to keep me busy. They are an odd lot of little things…
A. These are two small oils that were to be test paintings for the larger Jones Beach piece recently finished.
B. There are three small portraits of Kruse family women ready to be done, as a challenge to my skills, in water color.
C. Then, there’s the three judges. Watercolors from photos of a Irish festival we attended in upstate New York some years ago. I had planned to send each judge their piece, that is, if they are still alive.
D. The same with a series of bird watercolors. The New York State museum in Albany had a great collection of stuffed birds in very good dioramas. Four of the pieces are ready to go.
And, finally, in the 1980s I decorated a number of clocks with famous artist themes. The two finished are Monet and Van Gogh, the one remaining (it’s been sitting around for 30 years) is to be based on Rousseau’s jungle paintings.
So, with all these projects now scattered about the studio I’m hoping to get something done, keeping up my skills and moving stuff along.
The Devil is in the Details.
Work continues on the Volante.
This piece is called a Peterson’s Patent Anchor Windlass. It was developed and patented in the late 1830s and is still in use today. In the 1880s a marine engineer accommodated me by making a detailed drawing of the equipment (gotta love the internet for research, his huge book on shipbuilding in the 19th century was digitized and posted free). There are over 30 parts to the finished windlass, now installed on the Volante.
And now for something completely different…
(A good friend passed along a photoshop contest challenging me to do something. This is what I came up with).
What if…
Finally, my birthday gift has arrived.
It’s called a Van Moof, manufactured in Holland, it is the most advanced ebikes on the market. With it’s on-board wifi connected computer, it features an electronic transmission (no traveler), built in front and rear lights, an LED panel embedded into the cross bar with speed, battery life, and gear engagement, and an anti-theft locking back wheel with an alarm should anyone try to steal the bike and a gps locator to find the thief. The batteries are in the frame, gets 50 miles to a charge, takes only two hours to fully charge and weights only 40lbs. This is truly ‘state-of-the-art’ in ebike technology and, for the curious, yes, very expensive (but it was a gift from my father, a story for another time). I took it out the other day for an extended ride and can report, it is truly the Tesla of ebikes. I love it.
That’s all for now. Be well and have a happy holiday season. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Added Nov 18, 2020
What's on the Easel, November 2020
What’s On The Easel
November 2020, Vol. II, No. 11
A monthly newsletter from Jim Fischer
To tell the truth…
…nada. The creative muse has taken a hiatus, no projects come to mind to engage my passion. So, I have moved to other distractions awaiting the Goddess of Creativity to once again strike me. And there’s plenty to keep me busy like winterizing the gardens and taking care of long overdue tasks around the house (including such things as getting the rugs cleaned and having the heating system checked out before winter sets in).
Another obsession.
Then there is the ship, the Volante. Just how did I get into this? When I married my first wife in 1972 we had no money so for a honeymoon we drove up to Mystic Seaport for a long weekend. I was blown away by the models in their museum. There was a small model in the gift shop priced at a mere $600, way out of reach for me, so, being someone who believes that if a human being can do it, so can I, I started making models. In fact, that’s all I did in my spare time for the next eight years (and how I got back to doing art is another story). I made six models, three large ones (the three smaller ones were used to test techniques for use on the larger ones). Three models survive, The Charles Morgan, The Constitution (which I have) and the Gjoa (the test model for the Constitution). The large model of the Flying Fish was destroyed by a football in my sister-in-law’s living room, two of the small ones have vanished.
And here I am, back in the model ship business. The project is proving challenging and rewarding. Progress is slow as shown by this month’s productivity, but it’s fun.
A bit about the ship.
Why the Volante? Two reasons: I wanted to do something in a larger scale, 1/4 inch to the foot rather than the standard 1/8. This would allow for more detail. I originally wanted to do a clipper ship, the Flying Cloud or Flying Fish but, at that scale the model would be over 7 feet long, not practical for home display. The Volante, officially a brig (two square rigged masts) has all the features of clipper ship design (the pinnacle of large sailing ship design soon replaced by steam).
The second reason is the history of the ship itself. The Volante is typical of the smaller sailing ships used by the Confederacy to run the Union blockade, small and fast (you might recall what Rhett Butler did during the war). In fact, the ship was captured by the U.S.S. Virginia off the coast of Texas in early 1864 as it tried to enter Galveston harbor (and I’m debating putting the gallows at the top of the main mast that they would use to hang the traitorous captain as they sailed their prize into New Orleans harbor).
And the holidays are approaching
It was time to design this year’s holiday card.
And the Imagination series continues with the smallest piece yet, Die Fledermaus at only 2 1/2” x 1”.
Helping a friend …
During this ‘downtime’ my large format printer needs to run on a regular basis. So I’m helping a friend develop a series of place mats. Something else to do as I await the muse to strike (not to worry, this has happened before, you can only keep the creative drive at bay for a while).
Last but not least, having some fun
Meet the Covids - Vacation in Venice
That’s all for now. Be well. And what’s on your easel?
Jim
Jim Fischer, 530 Liberty Avenue, Jersey City, NJ, 07307
To unsubscribe to this enewsletter, simple return this email with the subject line ‘unsubscribe.’
To subscribe to this monthly email, drop me a note at theartistjimfischer@yahoo.com
Reviews and comments

©2019 Jim Fischer

©2019 Jim Fischer

©2017 Jim Fischer

©2017 Jim Fischer
Superbe point de vue pour ce pont au drapeau !.

©2018 Jim Fischer

©2010 Jim Fischer

©2014 Jim Fischer

©2014 Jim Fischer
Ça sent l'été et les vacances .