Popular painter Thomas Kinkade died from natural causes Friday in his California home, his family said. NBC's Michelle Franzen reports.
He was 54, and his family issued a statement that his death appeared to be from natural causes.
"Thom provided a wonderful life for his family,'' his wife, Nanette, said in a statement. "We are shocked and saddened by his death.''
Kinkade lived with his wife and was the father of four girls, NBCBayArea.com reported.
"Thomas Kinkade, the celebrated 'Painter of Light' is one of the most widely collected and beloved artists of our day," Kinkade's website states.
"Each year millions of people are drawn to the luminous light and
tranquil mood of Kinkade's paintings and include his creations in their
lives through prints, books, and other fine collectibles."
The University of California Berkeley graduate had a strong faith in God, which served as the foundation for his artwork.
"I
try to create paintings that are a window for the imagination," Kinkade
said on his website. "If people look at my work and are reminded of the
way things once were or perhaps the way they could be, then I've done
my job."
Kinkade's Media Arts Group took in $32 million per
quarter from 4,500 dealers across the country 10 years ago, before
going private in the middle of last decade, the Mercury News
reported. Paintings are priced hundreds of dollars to more than $10,000.His website also offers prints, mugs, nightlights and other home-decor items adorned with his paintings, which feature bridges, churches, cottages, Disney scenes, gazebos estates and the outdoors.
On Friday, the Mercury News reported that Kinkade's family was traveling to Australia and unavailable for further comment.
Bennett Raglin / WireImage
Artist Thomas Kinkade paints the 2007 Rockefeller Center Christmas Tree Nov. 30, 2007, in New York City.
In 2010, his production arm, Pacific Metro of Morgan Hill, Calif., filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection a day after a $1 million payment was due to former Kinkade gallery owners who won a judgment after claiming Kinkade used his Christian faith as a tool to fraudulently induce them to invest in his galleries, the Los Angeles Times reported at the time. From 1997 through May 2005, as galleries failed, Kinkade reaped more than $50 million from his prints and licensed product lines, according to testimony in the case cited by the Times.
In 2006, the Times reported that former Kinkade dealers told the newspaper that the FBI was looking into allegations that Kinkade and his top executives fraudulently induced investors to open galleries and then ruined them financially. The company, in a Sept. 1, 2006, statement called the allegations a "smear campaign."
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