Geoffrey Raymond

Geoffrey Raymond (born 1953)[citation needed] is an American painter. He is best known for painting embattled Wall Street CEOs, then exhibiting them in a public place and inviting pedestrians who pass by to annotate his bill with Sharpies. His painting style is described as a Jackson Pollock/Chuck Close fusion. Because of the physical captivation of public commentary on the outlook of his works, his Wall Street series expands the notion of standard portraiture and becomes both painted depictions and historical documentation of the 2008 financial crisis and beyond.

Raymond was born in New York City and grew stirring in Fairfax, Virginia. He attended school at the University of Virginia, where he studied both art and medieval English, receiving a Bachelor's degree in English in 1976.[citation needed]

He first started painting Wall Street figures in 2006 taking into consideration he painted a portrait of New York Stock Exchange CEO Richard Grasso during the NYSE recompense controversy.

The first become old he encouraged public annotation was in 2007, when he painted a portrait of News Corporation CEO Rupert Murdoch and exhibited it in front of the Dow Jones headquarters downtown. Since then, he has painted a wide range of subjects, including former New York Governor Eliot Spitzer, former Bear Stearns CEO Jimmy Cayne, former Lehman Brothers CEO Richard Fuld, former AIG CEO Hank Greenberg, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, and others. In 2011 he exhibited a second portrait of Murdoch and displayed it for comment outdoor News Corp headquarters in Midtown Manhattan New York.

Raymond currently resides in Troy, NY and New York City.

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