Duane A. Paluska, 83, died peacefully on January 28, 2020,
surrounded by family at Central Maine Medical Center after suffering a
hemorrhagic stroke.
He was born on June 22, 1936 in Aurora, IL and grew up in nearby
Naperville, IL, the middle son of John and Ora Paluska. After graduating from high school in
Naperville, he attended Knox College, where he received a degree in English and
was elected to Phi Beta Kappa (1958). He
continued his studies at Yale University (1959) on a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship,
and later received his masters at Bread Loaf School of English (1964) and a PhD
from Brandeis University (1970).
While completing his graduate studies, he taught English at
Governor Dummer Academy and Wheelock College in Massachusetts before moving to
Maine in 1968 to teach English at Bowdoin College. He enjoyed teaching, but after six years at
Bowdoin his budding interest in making furniture prompted him to pursue a
career as a cabinetmaker.
Duane soon established himself as one of Maine’s finest custom
furniture makers. He channeled his early
influences of Chippendale and Queen Anne traditions and the simple, honest
utility of Shaker furniture into a distinctly personal style. He built timeless furniture marked by elegant
joinery and clean, unfussy design. He
worked on commission based on word of mouth, and it was not unusual to wait a
year or more for a piece of his furniture.
In the late 1980s, he returned to painting and sculpture, having
abandoned a promising career as a painter when he began teaching in the 1960s.
Inspired by the experience of re-canvassing a favorite wooden canoe, he began
canvassing and painting wall cabinets.
This soon led to more traditional wall art featuring wood shapes wrapped
in pieces of painted canvas as well as early forays into sculpture. His solo
show at Dean Valentgas Gallery in Portland in 1991 was the first of numerous
solo and group shows throughout the Northeast in the ensuing years. His work is
included in the permanent collections of the Portland Museum of Art, the
deCordova Museum and Bowdoin’s Walker Art Museum, among others.
In 1989, Duane opened Icon Contemporary Art in Brunswick. Housed adjacent to his workshop and studio in
a former Knights of Columbus hall, Icon helped launch the careers of many
artists and became a hub for the Maine modern art community. Duane had a special knack for curating and
hanging the many shows that Icon hosted in the thirty plus years of its
existence, often through unexpected juxtapositions of diverse artists.
Duane was a quiet, deeply contemplative man with a wry sense of
humor who treasured time spent with family and his wide circle of friends. He loved working with his hands and leaves
behind an enduring legacy of beautiful things. Ever curious about the world
around him, he was an avid reader, traveler and camper. He logged countless
miles touring around North America on his beloved BMW motorcycle, often
attending minor league baseball games along the way. He loved many styles of music, particularly
classical and jazz, and greatly enjoyed attending concerts. On most Sundays, he could be found baking
bread in the home he designed and built in the 1980s; handcrafted down to the
smallest detail, the house is his magnum opus and definitively embodies both
his craftsmanship and aesthetic sensibility.
Duane is survived by his wife of thirty-six years, Ellen Frances
Golden; his sons John (Rachel) Russell Paluska and Peter (Megan) Sandness
Paluska; his brothers Keith Gary Paluska and Roger (Sue) Charles Paluska; three
grandsons, Wes, Pablo and Fox, and several nieces and nephews.
A memorial service will occur in late June.
To reflect his lifelong love of reading, contributions in Duane’s
memory may be made to the Curtis Memorial Library in Brunswick (http://curtislibrary.com/donate/).
Arrangements are by Stetson’s Funeral Home 12 Federal St. Brunswick where
memorial condolences may be expressed at stetsonsfuneralhome.com