When you
look at a
painting of
a golf
course, it
is important
to see it as
a golfer
sees it and
listen to
what a great
golfer has
to say about
it. "I am
the proud
owner of
several
paintings by
Linda
Hartough,"
says golf
legend Jack
Nicklaus,
one of the
greatest
golfers in
all sport,
"and each
time I look
at one I see
something
new. Linda
has a true
feel for a
golf
course."
"Whenever
you see a
Linda
Hartough
golf course
rendering,"
says
renowned
golf course
designed
Robert Trent
Jones, Sr.,
"you have to
resist the
urge to grab
a club and
drop a ball.
Linda has
the unique
ability to
capture, in
a single
solitary
perspective,
the very
essence of
the course
itself."
An
interesting
fate for a
person who
didn’t grow
up sharing
her father’s
passion for
playing the
sport. But
Linda
Hartough is
an artist
first and
foremost.
She
instinctively
knew that
something as
complex and
beloved as a
golf course
would have
to be an
exceptional
landscape,
with an
attention to
detail and
clarity that
surpasses a
camera.
Calling
upon her
experiences
at the
University
of
Louisville
and the Art
Institute of
Chicago,
Hartough
approaches
each work
with an
understanding
but
objective
eye. The
results have
made her one
of the
popular and
prominent
artists in
the field.
In fact, she
is the only
artist ever
commissioned
by both the
United
States Golf
Association
and the
Championship
Committee of
the Royal &
Ancient Golf
Club of St.
Andrews to
create the
official
paintings
and prints
for the U.S.
Open and
British Open
championships.
A
veritable
championship
tournament
of her work
was released
as Hallowed
Ground:
Golf’s Great
Places, a
book with
text by
Jaime Diaz,
published by
The
Greenwich
Workshop
Press.