On canvas, other surfaces and through the materials selected for his sculpted work, versatile Pittsburgh artist Ray Sokolowski has compiled a thoroughly insightful recollection of a rich life fully observed. His documentation of that journey combines a history of family events and the dwellings and neighborhoods that framed them with an eclectic range of sights and situations – commonplace and decidedly not – that captured his interest over the years. While Ray’s work conveys his distinctive interpretations of his life’s respective subjects, it is also representative of a style that has established him as a figure of substance in the Pittsburgh arts community. Ray’s artistic approach that has led to a number of commissions from clients who specify the focus and painting-versus-sculpture medium of the assignments being funded.
Ray graduated from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh in 1963 and immediately landed a job as a glassware designer. After just six months at his first job, he left and joined the Navy. It was the Vietnam war era. He was assigned to the submarine service that patrolled the southeastern coast of the United States.
After his time in the navy, in 1969, Ray found a job as a team artisan for F. W. Kestle Display Company in Pittsburgh, PA. His tasks included assisting in metal sculpting and designing retail window displays. He also sculpted works for St. Hyacinth Catholic Catholic Church in Monesson, PA including the altar, tabernacle and stations of the cross. (This church as since permanently closed due to the death of the owner.)
In 1982, he found a job at the Carnegie Museum of Art as an Installation Specialist. For 24 years, Ray would mat, frame, install works of art and create mounts, plus ship and receive various works of art. He was also responsible for hand-lettering all exhibition wall texts before this task was produced by the vinyl decal process. Ray’s main reason for wanting to work at The Carnegie was so that he could be close to and have hands-on experience with the artworks of the masters. Ray spent his evenings and weekend time away from the gallery doing sculpting and painting. Once he felt the need to switch up his life again, he left the Carnegie Museum of Art to became a full time painter and sculptor. The years of working with famous paintings and sculptures have greatly inspired his art style and how he uses his tools and mediums. His artistic technique continues to transform with each artwork he makes. When asked to describe his painting style, he says, “I evolve, I evolve, I evolve. I don’t want to be static.”
Ray’s paintings and sculptures evoke happiness and movement with their flowing brushstrokes and whimsical figures. He creates with the intention of inviting the viewer into self-discovery and peace. He masterfully summed up his positive outlook on life and appreciation for art in one statement: “Everything you see in this world, there is an artist behind it. Everything is art and art is everything.”
Given his 33-year marriage to illustrator Kathy Rooney and their formation of Rooney Ray Arts, Inc., it’s probably no surprise that Ray’s artistic focus would be drawn to the roots of a prominent local business operated by his wife’s extended family. The stimulus of his interest was a treasured family photo of The Hope Harvey Football Club, 1923, a predecessor version of today’s Pittsburgh Steelers that featured four Rooney brothers including Kathy’s father, Vince, then just fourteen. Twenty-two individual members strong and standing side by side – Vince sat cross-legged in the foreground cradling a football -- the team formed an iconic image that, in Ray’s view, deserved to be brought to the 21st century and multi-dimensional life. In the form of a sculpture spanning eight feet in length, his recreation in cold-cast nickel resin resides, among other locations, in the permanent collections of the prominent Nemacolin Woodlands Resort in Farmington, PA. A full-size treatment of the Hope Harvey Team Sculpture in its 3rd edition is presented in Hydro-stone plaster and has been acquired by the Pittsburgh Steelers for their Acrisure Stadium Hall of Fame Museum in Pittsburgh, PA where it is permanently displayed.
In 2018 Ray was commissioned by Saint Bonaventure University campus in New York to create a 5-pc life sized cast bronze sculpture of Saints Francis and Clare of Assisi sitting on a bench alongside their four-legged friends, a wolf and a cat. Shown in this photo is Ray doing a final foundry check on his bronze casting of Saint Clare.
Ray’s work is displayed and owned by numerous prestigious public and private collections, including those of Art Rooney, Jr., and noted Hollywood film producer Jimmy Miller. His paintings and sculptures have been exhibited at these preeminent events and institutions:
Pittsburgh Steelers Acrisure Hall of Honor Museum, Pittsburgh, PA (Permanent Collection, 2024)
Mark Rengers Gallery, Sewickley, PA, Solo Exhibition (2023)
St. Bonaventure University, Olean, NY (Permanent Collection, 2006, 2018 and 2020 respectively)
International Juried Catholic Arts Exhibition of Saint Vincent College, Latrobe, PA (2014 and 2018)
Point Park University, Pittsburgh, PA, Solo Exhibition (2016)
Nemacolin Woodlands Resort, Farmington, PA (Permanent Collection, 2014)
Westmoreland Museum of American Art Juried Biennial, Greensburg, PA (2010 and 2012)
Senator John Heinz History Center, Pittsburgh, PA (2008 - 2011)
Irma Freeman Center for Imagination, Pittsburgh, PA (2011)
Ryan Arts Center, Pittsburgh, PA, Solo Exhibition (2010)
Pro Football Hall of Fame, Canton, OH (2009)
Oglebay Resort, Wheeling, WVA (2008)
Gulf Oil Corporation Headquarters, Pittsburgh, PA (1981)
Station Square, Pittsburgh, PA (1980)
Allegheny Ludlum Steel Headquarters, Pittsburgh, PA (1979)
Neiman Marcus, Dallas Texas (1978)
Ray is a dedicated full time artist and a business partner with his illustrator wife, Kathy Rooney. Together they formed Rooney & Ray Arts, Inc. in 2000 to satisfy the art needs of collectors and corporations looking for inspirational, visual branding. You can visit Kathy Rooney’s web site at: krooney.net