A Maritime Safety and Security Team (MSST) is ready for a confrontation, and the viewer of this new painting by Ken Smith is happy to witness this action from in front of the canvas, and not from the business end of the M-4 carbine rifle.
This MSST team from St. Marys, Georgia is shown securing an area of the port as an HH-60 Jayhawk helicopter prepares to drop crew members onto a tanker to determine whether the vessel is engaged in illegal activity or otherwise poses a threat.
MSST: Sighting Down Threats recently received the Coast Guard Art Program’s (COGAP) coveted George Gray Award for Artistic Excellence during a special reception at the Salmagundi Club in New York City.
Smith was one of 28 COGAP artists whose works were juried into the U.S. Coast Guard’s permanent collection in 2010. This year, 41 paintings were admitted into the collection, with one painting receiving the George Gray award. Smith’s painting, Air Station Savannah, received the award in 2009.
“My paintings generally tend toward military subject matter, so I was naturally attracted to the MSSTs and their anti-terrorism mission,” said Smith. “In discussing their work, the team’s no-nonsense attitude really appealed to my sense of drama and of course to the Coast Guard’s motto, Semper Paratus.”
The George Gray Award is named after one of the co-founders of COGAP. Gray was an artist for more than seven decades and served as the chairman of COGAP for over 20 years. The Coast Guard Art Program uses visual arts to communicate the history and the current life of this branch of military service. The collection, which includes over 1,800 works, is shown at galleries, museums, and Coast Guard bases, as well as at other U.S. government locations both at home and abroad. To learn more about the United States Coast Guard Art Program, visit http://www.uscg.mil/community/Art_Program.asp.
MSST: Sighting Down Threats will be displayed through August 12 at the Federal Hall National Memorial in New York City as part of the Coast Guard Art Program exhibit, titled “Underway with the Coast Guard: Observations in Art.” The memorial is open Monday through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. The memorial is closed on weekends.
Smith, a resident of Pulaski, Virginia is an Assistant Professor of Graphic Design at Radford University in Radford, Virginia. He holds a BFA from the University of Tennessee, an MA from Syracuse University and a MFA from the University of Hartford. He is available for commissions and portraits. To see more of Smith’s work, visit www.kensmithhistoricalart.com.
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