Current:Home > NewsSharon Stone, artist -TruePath Finance
Sharon Stone, artist
View
Date:2025-04-11 20:59:23
There is a world where charcoal-colored snakes coil through clouds of pink and blue, where banyan trees hover almost translucent, where colors curve and nature unravels … a world of acrylic on canvas that you might be surprised to learn comes from the brushstrokes of activist and actor Sharon Stone.
"Nature is almost, like, this free hand of God, if you will – flowers, tulips, dandelions," she said. "You don't have to paint a dandelion exactly like that, you know what I mean? They can be the feeling of the dandelion."
She knows it's easy to be cynical about celebrities trying their hand in the art world. At 65, she's heard all the whispers: "Everybody feels like, well, 'cause she's old, and she's too old to be a sex symbol anymore. And she's too old to do that. So, we can dismiss her into her painting thing."
The reaction so far has been far from negative. Last year, Stone was invited to have a gallery show in Los Angeles. Then came a show called "Welcome to My Garden," currently on view at the C. Parker Gallery in Greenwich, Connecticut.
The shows have excited both critics and collectors. Her works are now selling for tens of thousands of dollars. It is now, she says, a full-on business, though one created by accident. "I didn't have any real intentions, except just following my passion," she said.
Cowan asked, "Does it matter whether they're buying it because they love the work, or because it's Sharon Stone, the actress? Does it matter to you?"
"People come to see my art now, first, just 'cause it's me," Stone said. "But I feel just fine about that, because I've earned being me. But no, I'm totally comfortable. If you want to buy my work because it matches your sofa … know what I mean? No, I'm totally good with that."
When she hit it big in the '90s with movies like "Basic Instinct," it was pretty clear there was more to Stone than just her looks. She proved she could hold her own against the likes of Gene Hackman in the western "The Quick and the Dead." And there were few chip fits like the one Stone threw in Martin Scorsese's "Casino." That role got her an Oscar nomination. But Stone says, even back then, acting was only a small piece of her personal puzzle. "Everybody told me to stay in my lane, and my lanes started to just get so narrow," she said. "I don't think I'm just an actress, or a writer, or a painter. I think I'm just an artist."
The last time "Sunday Morning" met with Stone was back in 2018, and given the severity of the brain hemorrhage that she told us she'd suffered two decades ago, it's actually a miracle Stone's doing anything, let alone painting. It had affected her speech, her hearing, her walking. "There was about a 5% chance of me living," she explained.
Fast forward to 2020, during the pandemic a friend of Stone's gave her a paint-by-numbers kit, and she found herself at an easel in her bedroom. She posted the result on Instagram, noting: "It actually looks like something, which I find completely remarkable."
"I did the paint-by-numbers with a lot of diligence because I wanted to get my brush strokes together," she said. "To have the brush strokes perfect and flawless is a really painstaking, irritating, complicated exercise. It really is a pain in the ass."
View this post on InstagramA post shared by Sharon Stone (@sharonstone)
But that posterior painting pain did awaken something very familiar: Stone has actually been painting for most of her life. She started as a young girl growing up in rural Pennsylvania, where her aunt taught her almost everything she knew. When asked for a piece of painting advice she learned from her, Stone said, "I think just that, you're not wrong. There is no wrong."
She has her own advice as well: "You don't want people to ever really totally figure out a painting."
While attending Edinboro University of Pennsylvania on a writing scholarship, Stone not only majored in art, but made art to support herself, living the life of a starving artist. "I sold every painting I made," she said. "I mean, I was selling them for, like, twenty-five bucks when I was in college, just to eat."
To watch her work all these years later is to watch someone in an almost trance-like state, open to whatever moves her.
"I feel what's coming through the canvas here now," she said. "It's okay to not know, you know, and it's also okay to go with not knowing. I'm letting it evolve and tell me what it wants to be…."
"I think if you listen to the highest consciousness and follow that voice, how do you go wrong with that?" Stone asked.
Paintings in a back room of her Beverly Hills home are being prepared to be shipped to Berlin, where Stone will open her very first international show next month.
She's certainly not done with acting, but for now at least Sharon Stone has traded the red carpet for a palette with every color under the sun.
"I do it because I'm fully and wholly immersed in it, and I love it, and I have to," she said. "'Cause I'd rather do it than anything else."
For more info:
- Exhibition: "Sharon Stone - Welcome to My Garden," at the C. Parker Gallery, Greenwich, Conn. (through February 20)
- Follow Sharon Stone on Instagram
Story produced by Jay Kernis. Editor: Mike Levine.
- In:
- Sharon Stone
veryGood! (34)
Related
- Rams vs. 49ers highlights: LA wins rainy defensive struggle in key divisional game
- Americans are running away from church. But they don't have to run from each other.
- Not-so-happy meal: As fast food prices surge, many Americans say it's become a luxury
- Louisiana may soon require public school classrooms to display the Ten Commandments
- Federal court filings allege official committed perjury in lawsuit tied to Louisiana grain terminal
- Score 70% Off Banana Republic, 60% Off J.Crew, 65% Off Reebok, $545 Off iRobot Vacuums & More Deals
- Key Republican calls for ‘generational’ increase in defense spending to counter US adversaries
- Egypt and China deepen cooperation during el-Sissi’s visit to Beijing
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Nebraska volleyball coach John Cook's new contract is designed to help him buy a horse
Ranking
- Trump suggestion that Egypt, Jordan absorb Palestinians from Gaza draws rejections, confusion
- A Jewish veteran from London prepares to commemorate the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings
- Americans are running away from church. But they don't have to run from each other.
- Man accused of driving toward people outside New York Jewish school charged with hate crimes
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Iran says Saudi Arabia has expelled 6 state media journalists ahead of the Hajj after detaining them
- Over 150 monkey deaths now linked to heat wave in Mexico: There are going to be a lot of casualties
- Argentina women’s soccer players understand why teammates quit amid dispute, but wish they’d stayed
Recommendation
What were Tom Selleck's juicy final 'Blue Bloods' words in Reagan family
Clerk over Alex Murdaugh trial spent thousands on bonuses, meals and gifts, ethics complaint says
Plaza dedicated at the site where Sojourner Truth gave her 1851 ‘Ain’t I a Woman?’ speech
The number of Americans applying for jobless benefits inches up, but layoffs remain low
Rylee Arnold Shares a Long
Vermont police conclude case of dead baby more than 40 years later and say no charges will be filed
Get three months of free Panera coffee, tea and more drinks with Unlimited Sip Club promotion
Nissan issues urgent warning over exploding Takata airbag inflators on 84,000 older vehicles