Patrick Adams was born in the small, southwestern Minnesota farming
community of Worthington in 1965. This rural setting of tall-grass prairie
and natural lakes would make a lasting impression. When he was twelve,
he began entering local and regional art competitions and selling his
paintings. In 1983, he entered Bemidji State University in northern Minnesota
with scholarships in both art and music (trumpet performance). He later
transferred to Winona State University in southeastern Minnesota where
he received the Mausycki Art Scholarship (now the Max Weber scholarship)
and was awarded a solo exhibition.
In 1988, Patrick married Dr. Terre Wilson in Rochester, Minnesota where
Terre was completing her residency in Internal Medicine at the Mayo Clinic.
They moved to Lexington, Kentucky in 1989 for Patrick to enter the Master
of Fine Arts program at the University of Kentucky. In his second year,
he was awarded a full scholarship and began working as a teaching assistant.
After graduating in 1992, Adams continued to teach at the University
of Kentucky and in 1994 began teaching at Asbury College.
Patrick and his family moved to Nicholasville, Kentucky in 1998 where
he built a studio near his home. In 2000, he was awarded an Al Smith
Fellowship which enabled him to spend a month in Provence, France where
he laid the groundwork for his abstract landscapes. He left his teaching
responsibilities in 2001 to pursue his art full-time.
Patrick has also continued his interest in music both as a performer
and composer. In 1987, he released an album of original solo piano pieces
titled Piano Sketches. He performs regularly in jazz combos, big bands,
and rock venues. His latest recording project of original jazz compositions,
Solipsis, was released in early June of 2005. He is currently at work
on his first composition for symphony orchestra, and a group of string
quartets for a documentary on the life of contemporary Russian iconographer,
Xenia Prokovsky.
© 2005 Patrick Adams. Used by permission of the author.
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