Lester J Ohnson:1 in New York and P-Town
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The New York Observer January 10, 2000
The New York Observer January 10, 2000 Müller and Thompson: Adjuncts in Art By Mario Naves The paintings of Jan Müller (1922-1958) and Bob Thompson (1937-1966), the subject of the exhibition “Search for the Unicorn” at Lori Bookstein Fine Art, are so striking in their similarities that one initially assumes they were colleagues working in intimate correspondence towards a common goal: the establishment of a post-Ab- Ex school of painting that embraced the Arcadian, the mythic, and the figure. Coming upon “Jan Müller’s Funeral” (1958) at Bookstein, we presume that this somber canvas was Thompson’s homage to his mentor. Which is, in a sense, precisely the case, as is the notion that both men were adjuncts in art. Yet, in actuality, Müller and Thompson never met, a fact that comes as a surprise when comparing their respective work. Thompson did eventually befriend Müller’s widow, Dody, who sternly advised the young artist not to “ever look for your solutions from contemporaries—look at Old Masters.” He would heed this advice—Thompson’s paintings are replete with quotations from Masaccio, Piero della Francesca, Poussin and others—but did not ignore the juggernaut that was the New York School. This mix resulted in densely packed canvases that are flat and bright, cluttered and hasty, electric and ambitious. Thompson can’t be considered, as the painter Jay Milder described him, “a great synthesist;” the work is too unfocused to earn such a moniker and is notable more for its promise than its attainment. But the paintings Thompson left behind upon his untimely death of a drug overdoes in 1966 do form one of the most tantalizing, and frustrating, “What if’s?” in recent art history. -
A Finding Aid to the Bob Thompson Papers, 1949-2005, in the Archives of American Art
A Finding Aid to the Bob Thompson Papers, 1949-2005, in the Archives of American Art Kimberley Henze and Rihoko Ueno Funding for the digitization of this collection was provided by The Walton Family Foundation and the Terra Foundation for American Art. 2015 June 15 Archives of American Art 750 9th Street, NW Victor Building, Suite 2200 Washington, D.C. 20001 https://www.aaa.si.edu/services/questions https://www.aaa.si.edu/ Table of Contents Collection Overview ........................................................................................................ 1 Administrative Information .............................................................................................. 1 Scope and Contents........................................................................................................ 2 Biographical / Historical.................................................................................................... 2 Arrangement..................................................................................................................... 3 Names and Subjects ...................................................................................................... 3 Container Listing ............................................................................................................. 5 Series 1: Biographical Material, 1953-2003............................................................. 5 Series 2: Carol Thompson's Correspondence, 1971-2000...................................... 6 Series 3: Writings, 1949-1998................................................................................. -
Modernism 1 Modernism
Modernism 1 Modernism Modernism, in its broadest definition, is modern thought, character, or practice. More specifically, the term describes the modernist movement, its set of cultural tendencies and array of associated cultural movements, originally arising from wide-scale and far-reaching changes to Western society in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Modernism was a revolt against the conservative values of realism.[2] [3] [4] Arguably the most paradigmatic motive of modernism is the rejection of tradition and its reprise, incorporation, rewriting, recapitulation, revision and parody in new forms.[5] [6] [7] Modernism rejected the lingering certainty of Enlightenment thinking and also rejected the existence of a compassionate, all-powerful Creator God.[8] [9] In general, the term modernism encompasses the activities and output of those who felt the "traditional" forms of art, architecture, literature, religious faith, social organization and daily life were becoming outdated in the new economic, social, and political conditions of an Hans Hofmann, "The Gate", 1959–1960, emerging fully industrialized world. The poet Ezra Pound's 1934 collection: Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. injunction to "Make it new!" was paradigmatic of the movement's Hofmann was renowned not only as an artist but approach towards the obsolete. Another paradigmatic exhortation was also as a teacher of art, and a modernist theorist articulated by philosopher and composer Theodor Adorno, who, in the both in his native Germany and later in the U.S. During the 1930s in New York and California he 1940s, challenged conventional surface coherence and appearance of introduced modernism and modernist theories to [10] harmony typical of the rationality of Enlightenment thinking. -
A Stellar Century of Cultivating Culture
COVERFEATURE THE PAAMPROVINCETOWN ART ASSOCIATION AND MUSEUM 2014 A Stellar Century of Cultivating Culture By Christopher Busa Certainly it is impossible to capture in a few pages a century of creative activity, with all the long hours in the studio, caught between doubt and decision, that hundreds of artists of the area have devoted to making art, but we can isolate some crucial directions, key figures, and salient issues that motivate artists to make art. We can also show why Provincetown has been sought out by so many of the nation’s notable artists, performers, and writers as a gathering place for creative activity. At the center of this activity, the Provincetown Art Associ- ation, before it became an accredited museum, orga- nized the solitary efforts of artists in their studios to share their work with an appreciative pub- lic, offering the dynamic back-and-forth that pushes achievement into social validation. Without this audience, artists suffer from lack of recognition. Perhaps personal stories are the best way to describe PAAM’s immense contribution, since people have always been the true life source of this iconic institution. 40 PROVINCETOWNARTS 2014 ABOVE: (LEFT) PAAM IN 2014 PHOTO BY JAMES ZIMMERMAN, (righT) PAA IN 1950 PHOTO BY GEORGE YATER OPPOSITE PAGE: (LEFT) LUCY L’ENGLE (1889–1978) AND AGNES WEINRICH (1873–1946), 1933 MODERN EXHIBITION CATALOGUE COVER (PAA), 8.5 BY 5.5 INCHES PAAM ARCHIVES (righT) CHARLES W. HAwtHORNE (1872–1930), THE ARTIST’S PALEttE GIFT OF ANTOINETTE SCUDDER The Armory Show, introducing Modernism to America, ignited an angry dialogue between conservatives and Modernists. -
Philip Pearlstein
PHILIP PEARLSTEIN 1924 Born in Pittsburgh, PA on May 24 1942-49 B.F.A. from Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, PA 1955 M.A. from New York University, Institute of Fine Arts, New York, NY 1959-63 Instructor, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY 1962-63 Visiting Critic, Yale University, New Haven, CT 1963-88 Professor of Fine Art, Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, NY 1988 Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Brooklyn College, Brooklyn, NY 2003-06 President, American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, NY The artist lives and works in New York City. Solo Exhibitions 2018 Philip Pearlstein, Today, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, May 10 – June 17 Philip Pearlstein, Paintings 1990- 2017, Saatchi Gallery, London, United Kingdom, January 17 – April 29 2017 Facing You, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, May 5 – June 30 Philip Pearlstein: Seventy –Five Years of Painting, Susquehanna Museum of Art, Harrisburg, PA, February 11 – May 21 2016 G.I. Philip Pearlstein, World War II Captured on Paper, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, September 14 – October 15 2015-16 Pearlstein | Warhol | Cantor: From Carnegie Tech to New YorK, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, NY, Dec. 3 – March 5, 2016 2015 Pearlstein | Warhol | Cantor : From Pittsburgh to New YorK, Andy Warhol Museum, Pittsburgh, PA May 30- September 6 2014 Philip Pearlstein, Betty Cuningham Gallery, New York, NY, May 8 – July 27 Pearlstein at 90, Russell Bowman Art Advisory, Chicago, IL, April 4 – May 31 Philip Pearlstein: Six Paintings, Six Decades, National Academy of Art, New York, NY, Feb. 27 – May 11 Philip Pearlstein – Just The Facts, 50 Years of Looking and Drawing and Painting, Curated by Robert Storr, New York Studio School, New York, NY, January 16 – February 22 2013 Philip Pearlstein’s People, Places, Things, Museum of Fine Arts, St. -
Figurative Expressionism American Style
Saved from http://www.a-r-t.com/figexp/ search 17 Jul 2012 22:52:56 no other snapshots from this url All snapshots from host www.a-r-t.com Linked from en.wikipedia.org » Nicholas Marsicano Text Image download .zip report abuse PIN THIS PAGE: other EMOTIONAL IMPACT: FIGURATIVE EXPRESSIONISM AMERICAN STYLE From the Kresge Art Museum, East Lansing, MI Curator: April Kingsley Links: Introduction Images of the works List of Works Essay EMOTIONAL IMPACT: FIGURATIVE EXPRESSIONISM AMERICAN STYLE In America, starting in the 1950s--the heyday of Abstract Expressionism and New York’s takeover of the center of the artworld – a number of artists, in New York, in the San Francisco Bay Area, and around the country, decided to return to the figure. But as they were profoundly committed to the energetic Abstract Expressionist way of painting that had been formative of their styles, they would not give it up, choosing instead to adapt it to their equally profound need to paint recognizable imagery. Artists like Grace Hartigan, Elaine De Kooning, and Lester Johnson in the east, Nathan Oliviera, Elaine DeKooning Richard Diebenkorn, and David Parks in the west, and Vera Clement in Chicago had only this dual allegiance in common. The paintings of twenty-seven major American Figurative Expressionists have been Figurative Expressionists have been organized by Kresge Art Museum Curator April Kingsley into an exhibition which will open at the Kresge Art Museum in fall/winter 2010 and then be available to travel to other venues starting in 2011. The catalogue, published by the Michigan State University Press, will have approximately 200 pages and 50 color reproductions. -
Interview with Philip Pearlstein Studio International by Janet Mckenzie
Interview with Philip Pearlstein Studio International By Janet McKenzie Philip Pearlstein is one of the most important artists of the twentieth century who worked in an abstract expressionist style before shifting to large-scale formalist nudes constructed theatrically with a range of props from merry-go- round horses to the Eames chair. Pearlstein turns 92 this month yet he continues to work on large scale paintings where the nude figure is juxtaposed with a diverse range of objects: from crashed model aeroplanes to marionettes, a model of the White House that is in fact a birdcage, and richly patterned rugs and fabrics. A sense of enigmatic drama is created, perhaps alluding to the anachronistic nature of human existence, to the disconnect that exists between an individual and war and politics in the wider world. Pearlstein studied with Andy Warhol at the Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh after the war spent in Italy; they travelled together with Pearlstein’s future wife, Dorothy Cantor, also an art student, to New York where Pearlstein studied art history at New York University with Erwin Panofsky. His career has been hugely influential whilst consistently pursuing an independent path for over 60 years. In the lead up to a new exhibition of 170 of his wartime drawings, at the Betty Cuningham Gallery in New York, next month, Pearlstein speaks at length about his remarkable career. Janet McKenzie: You have been an active and productive artist for over 60 years, and so your career has taken place through numerous significant art world changes where you have played an important role. -
Not for the Uncommitted: the Alliance of Figurative Artists, 1969–1975 By
Not for the Uncommitted: The Alliance of Figurative Artists, 1969–1975 By Emily D. Markert Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Master of Arts in Curatorial Practice California College of the Arts April 22, 2021 Not for the Uncommitted: The Alliance of Figurative Artists, 1969–1975 Emily Markert California College of the Arts 2021 From 1969 through the early 1980s, hundreds of working artists gathered on Manhattan’s Lower East Side every Friday at meetings of the Alliance of Figurative Artists. The art historical canon overlooks figurative art from this period by focusing on a linear progression of modernism towards medium specificity. However, figurative painters persisted on the periphery of the New York art world. The size and scope of the Alliance and the interests of the artists involved expose the popular narrative of these generative decades in American art history to be a partial one promulgated by a few powerful art critics and curators. This exploration of the early years of the Alliance is divided into three parts: examining the group’s structure and the varied yet cohesive interests of eleven key artists; situating the Alliance within the contemporary New York arts landscape; and highlighting the contributions women artists made to the Alliance. Keywords: Post-war American art, figurative painting, realism, artist-run galleries, exhibitions history, feminist art history, second-wave feminism Acknowledgments and Dedication I would foremost like to thank the members of my thesis committee for their support and guidance. I am grateful to Jez Flores-García, my thesis advisor, for encouraging rigorous and thoughtful research and for always making time to discuss my ideas and questions. -
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 13 American Artists: a Celebration Of
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: 13 American Artists: A Celebration of Historic Work April 29 - June 26, 2021 Eric Firestone Gallery 40 Great Jones Street |New York, NY Featuring work by: Elaine Lustig Cohen |Charles DuBack | Martha Edelheit | Shirley Gorelick Mimi Gross | Howard Kanovitz | Jay Milder | Daphne Mumford | Joe Overstreet | Pat Passlof | Reuben Kadish | Miriam Schapiro | Thomas Sills Charles Duback | Adam and Eve, 1970 |acrylic, wood and felt on canvas | 96h x 120w in In honor of our first season in a new ground floor space at 40 Great Jones Street, Eric Firestone Gallery presents 13 American Artists, an exhibition showcasing artists from the gallery’s unique, wide-ranging historical program. The gallery has made central a mission to explore the ever-expanding canon of Post-World War II American art. Over the last several years, the gallery has presented major retrospectives to champion artists whose stories needed to be re-told. Their significant contributions to art history have been further reinforced by recent institutional acquisitions and exhibitions. 13 American Artists celebrates this ongoing endeavor, and the new gallery, presenting several artists and estates for the first time in our New York City location. EAST HAMPTON NYC 4 NEWTOWN LANE 40 GREAT JONES STREET EAST HAMPTON, NY 11937 NEW YORK, NY10012 631.604.2386 646.998.3727 Shirley Gorelick (1924-2000) is known for her humanist paintings of subjects who have traditionally not been heroized in large-scale portraiture. Gorelick, like most artists in this exhibition, forged her career outside of the mainstream art world. She was a founding member of Central Hall Artists Gallery, an all-women artist-run gallery in Port Washington, New York, and between 1975 and 1986, had six solo exhibitions at the New York City feminist cooperative SOHO20. -
SHFAP and Martha Henry Present
shfap SHFAP and Martha Henry present Pairings: Gandy Brodie / Bob Thompson: The Ecstasy of Influence, an exhibition about the painterly relationship of Gandy Brodie and Bob Thompson in the late 1950’s. Gandy Brodie and Bob Thompson both spent the summer of 1958 in Provincetown, Massachusetts, amidst a community of other artists that included Mimi Gross, Red Grooms, Jay Milder, Wolf Kahn, Emilio Cruz, Lester Johnson, Anne Tabachnick, Dody Müller and Christopher Lane. Art historian Judith Wilson characterized that Provincetown summer as exemplifying an “ecstasy of influence”: the influences of contemporary figurative painters on Thompson’s work. She wrote about this community in the 1998 Whitney Museum exhibition catalogue for Thompson’s retrospective. Jan Müller who died in January of 1958, was undeniably a significant influence on the developing Bob Thompson, despite the fact that they never met. However, the influences of other members of this community on Thompson have been less explored. Wilson touches on this as she quotes a mutual friend of Brodie and Thompson, the painter Emilio Cruz. Cruz has stated that Thompson painted “his first figurative paintings” in response to the influence of Gandy Brodie. In her Whitney essay, Wilson notes that “The gray-brown palette, division of the canvas into large rectangles of contrasting light and dark tones, and the mask- like treatment of faces, as in Brodie’s “The Penetration of a Thought”, 1958 and Thompson’s “Differences”, 1958, seems to bear this out.” This exhibition includes both “The Penetration of a Thought”, 1958 by Brodie and Thompson’s “Differences”, 1958, among 12 paintings all from the period steven harvey fine art projects gallery 24 east 73 street, #2f new york ny 10021 917.861.7312 office 780 riverside drive # 5aa new york ny 10032 212.281.2281 e [email protected] w www.shfap.com shfap between 1958 and 1964, exploring this influence and relationship between these two important post-war figurative painters. -
LOOKING for AMERICA, Another Excerpt from Ed Mccormack's
SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2011 www.galleryandstudiomagazine.com VOL. 14 NO. 1 New York GALLERYSTUDIO SENATEDELLA! The New York Art World’s Controversial Gadfly, Robert Cenedella, Skewers the U.S. Senate plus: LOOKING FOR AMERICA, another excerpt from Ed McCormack’s memoir in progress HOODLUM HEART pg. 14 Norman Perlmutter “ORDINARY THINGS” “File Box,” Acrylic on Canvas, 24"x30" “File Box,” October 25 – November 8, 2011 Tues - Sun 2-7pm Artist’s Receptions: Thurs., Oct. 27 & Fri., Nov 4, 6-8pm 2/20 Gallery 220 West 16th Street, New York, NY 10011 212-807-8348 — www.220gallery.net TINA ROHRER Awash in Blue and Green Geometric acrylic paintings presenting color interactions and impresssions of movement “Accent Aqua II,” Acrylic, 18"x18" “Accent Aqua II,” Dates: October 4-October 29, 2011 Reception: Saturday, October 8, 4-6 PM :HVWWK6W1<& 7XHV6DWDPSP ZZZQRKRJDOOHU\FRP GALLERYSTUDIO SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2011 GS Highlights On the Cover: Cenedella Takes On The Teabaggers –– pg. 9 PLUS: Eloping to the tune of a Simon & Garfunkel song ... Living a La Boheme fantasy like incestuous siblings in a blue Sharyn Finnegan, pg. 8 collar family attic ... Starry-eyed on the brink of nuclear apocalypse ... the HOODLUM HEART saga continues –– pg.14 Joan Marie Kelly, pg. 20 Catherine de Saugy, pg. 21 Marcia Clark, Malka Inbal, pg. 7 Tina Rohrer, pg. 4 pg. 5 Subscribe to GALLERYSTUDIO GALLERYSTUDIO An International Art Journal $25 Subscription $20 for additional Gift Subscription $47 International $5 Back Issues PUBLISHED BY Mail check or Money Order to: ©EYE LEVEL, LTD. -
Beer with a Painter: Catherine Murphy by Jennifer Samet – 2 August 2014
Beer with a Painter: Catherine Murphy By Jennifer Samet – 2 August 2014 Catherine Murphy, “Persimmon” (1991) oil on canvas 25 3/4 x 29 1/2 inches When I arrived at Catherine Murphy’s home in Poughkeepsie, New York, I was led down a long outdoor path to her studio. Murphy was working on a painting of a pie crust; she asked her assistant to put the dough on ice while she spoke with me. I looked around her studio, where curtains blocked the daylight from the windows, at other props: a branch hung from a corner of the ceiling, a mound of elaborately broken plates was the set-up for another painting, a mannequin slouched on a chair, and stuffed squirrels rested on a table. Once Murphy and I started talking, we didn’t get up from our chairs. After a couple of hours of conversation, I opened the studio door. I found my eyes blinking in the sunlight – reminded that we were in the midst of a lush landscape, suddenly noticing the flowering plants lining the path. We walked back to the patio for aranciatas with her husband, the sculptor Harry Roseman, while I let the air and the sound of birds wash over me. There had been a buzz of intensity to Murphy’s studio, with its windows blacked out; it felt warm and slightly claustrophobic. Although Murphy works from observation, hers are not scenic paintings. Her subjects include a garden hose and a garter snake curled on the grass, black garbage bags in the snow, pages from a coloring book, knots in wood, the edge of a chair marred by a cat’s scratches.