Agnes Martin at Los Angeles County Museum of Art

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Mid-Winter, c. 1954, Oil on Canvas

I had always drifted on the periphery of Agnes Martin fandom. But truth be told I had never seen more than one or two of her canvases at a time and they were mostly later paintings. So my understanding of Martin and her work was the art knowledge equivalent of cocktail chatter. Quick sound bites and surface sheen but very little substance. That all changed during my recent visit to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art’s steller showing of Martin’s work.

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From left: Mid-Winter, Untitled 1955 & Untitled 1954

I’m not a religious person by any means, but I’d be downplaying my experience at this exhibition if I’d didn’t at least in some way state that I felt like I’d been to church by the time I’d left. Not in a sacred “smells and bells” churchy type way, but in a more secular introspective reverent one. I arrived very early at LACMA and was the first into the galleries. I spent at least 20 minutes completely alone. Me and Agnes. And something happened. What occurs when one has the luxury of silence these days and the luxury too of being alone with a large collection of an artists oeuvre is transformative. Listening to the work becomes easier. One’s observational sense becomes keener. It felt as if Agnes and I were having a conversation; a really substantial one at that. And I found myself roaming from room to room, tears spilling down my cheeks.

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Untitled  c. 1955, Oil on canvas, 83.8 x 134.6

It’s cliché to say great work makes the viewer feel something. In a sense it does, but I believe great work does something much more significant. Truly transcendent work creates a form of communion, not just within the triangle of artist, artwork and viewer, but it charges the viewer with a type of abstract otherness. It connects us to the beyond. Opening a portal  of pure feeling. And for that I am thankful.

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Untitled c. 1955 , Oil on canvas, 118.1 x 168.3

This exhibition was organized by the Tate Modern in collaboration with the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen, Düsseldorf, and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York. The exhibition continues from now until September, 11 at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art before opening at the Guggenheim Museum in New York on October, 7. For more information about LACMA and this exhibition please check out the LACMA website. http://www.lacma.org/art/exhibition/agnes-martin

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From left: Beach, 1957 and Harbor No. 1, 1957

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Beach, 1957,Oil on canvas

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Beach (detail)

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Harbor No. 1, 1957, Oil on canvas, 126.3 x 101.6

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From left: Untitled 1958 and Untitled c. 1957

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Untitled 1958, Oil on canvas, 165.1 x 165.1

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Untitled c. 1957, Oil on canvas, 86.4 x 86.4

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From left: Heather 1958, The Heavenly Race (Running) c. 1959, Desert Rain 1957, Untitled 1959

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Heather 1958, Oil on canvas, 177.8 x 177.8

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The Heavenly Race (Running) c 1959, Oil on canvas, 30.5 x 90.2

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Desert Rain 1957, Oil on canvas

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Untitled 1959, Oil paint and Ink on canvas, 30.5 x 30.5

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Rain (Study) 1958, Oil on canvas, 63.5 x 63.5

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Untitled 1958, Oil on canvas, 60 x 60

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Burning Tree 1961, Wood and metal 33 x 53.3

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Buds c. 1959, Oil on canvas, 127 x 127

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From left: Untitled 1960, Untitled 1962, Little Sister 1962 and The Islands 1961

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The Islands 1961

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The Islands 1961 (Detail)

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Little Sister 1962, Oil paint, ink and brass nails on canvas and wood, 25.1 x 24.2

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Little Sister 1962 (Detail)

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Untitled 1962, Oil on canvas mounted on board with nails, 24.8 x 24.8

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Untitled 1960, Oil on canvas, 30.5 x 30.5

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Islands No. 4 c. 1961, Oil on canvas, 37.8 x 37.8

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Brown Composition 1961, Oil on canvas, 30.5 x 30.5

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From left: Horizon 1960, Untitled 1960 and Untitled 1960

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Horizon 1960, Oil on canvas, 38.1 x 38.1

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Untitled 1960, Oil on canvas, 30.5 x 30.5

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Untitled 1960, Oil on canvas, 30.5 x 30.5

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From left: Falling Blue 1963 and A Grey Stone 1963

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Falling Blue 1963, Oil on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Falling Blue 1963 (Detail)

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A Grey Stone 1963, Oil on canvas, 190.5 x 190.5

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A Grey Stone 1963 (Detail)

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White Stone 1964, Oil and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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White Stone 1964 (Detail)

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Adventure 1967, Acrylic paint and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Adventure 1967 (Detail)

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Small works on paper

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Aspiration 1960, Ink on paper, 28 x 24

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Aspiration 1960 (Detail)

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Balconies/Galleries 1962, Ink on paper, 22.9 x 22.9

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Balconies/Galleries 1962 (Detail)

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Weeds 1963, Ink and watercolor on paper, 22.9 x 22.9

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Weeds 1963 (Detail)

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On a Clear Day 1973, Thirty screen prints printed in gray on cream colored japanese paper, each 30.5 x 30.5

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On a Clear Day 1973 (Detail)

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From left: Untitled #12 1981 and Untitled IX 1982

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Untitled #12 1981, Acrylic and colored pencil on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Untitled #12 1981 (Detail)

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Untitled IX 1982, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Untitled IX 1982 (Detail)

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From left: Untitled #8 1974 and Untitled #4 1975

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Untitled #8 1974, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Untitled #8 1974 (Detail)

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Untitled #4 1975, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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From left: Untitled #1 1989 and Untitled #8 1989

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Untitled #1 1989, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Untitled #8 1989, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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From left: Untitled #15 1988 and Untitled #12 1984

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Untitled #12 1984, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Untitled #12 1984 (Detail)

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Untitled #14 1977, Ink, graphite and gesso on canvas, 182.9 x 182.9

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Untitled #14 1977 (Detail)

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Untitled 1978, Watercolor and ink on paper, 22.9 x 22.9

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Untitled 1978, Watercolor and ink on paper, 22.9 x 22.9

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From left: Affection 2001 and Gratitude 2001

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Affection 2001, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 152.4 x 152.4

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Gratitude 2001, Acrylic on canvas, 152.4 x 152.4

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Blessings 2001, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 152.4 x 152.4

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Blessings 2001 (Detail)

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From left: Untitled #12 2002 and Untitled #4 2002

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Untitled #12 2002, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 152.4 x 152.4

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 Untitled #4 2002, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 152.4 x 152.4

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The Sea 2003, Acrylic and graphite on canvas, 152.4 x 152.4

Philip Guston: Painter 1957 – 1967 at Hauser & Wirth

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Philip Guston: Painter 1957 – 1967 at Hauser & Wirth, New York covers the pivotal decade in Guston’s career during which the artist broke from abstraction, which made him famous in the 1950’s, and began a return to figuration.. The exhibition, a collection of 36 paintings and 56 drawings, is an absorbing exploration of the journey of process and experimentation that transformed the artist’s oeuvre.

For more information about the exhibition and Philip Guston please check out the Hauser & Wirth website at:

http://www.hauserwirth.com/exhibitions/2722/philip-guston-painter-1957-y-1967/view/

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From left: Traveller III, 1959 – 1960 & Painter, 1959, both Oil on Canvas

Painter courtesy of the High Museum of Art, Atlanta

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From left: Turn, 1959, Oil on Panel & Turnabout, 1959, Oil on paper mounted on Panel

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Turn, 1959, Oil on Panel, 22 5/8″ x 28 1/2″ Private Collection

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Turnabout, 1959, Oil on Panel, 22 1/8″ x 30 1/8″ Private Collection

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Untitled, c. 1959. Oil on paper mounted on panel, 18 1/8″ x 24 1/8″, Private Collection

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Untitled, 1958, Oil on Canvas, 64 1/8 x 75 1/4″, Private Collection

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Accord I, 1962, Oil on Canvas, 68 1/8 x 78 1/8″, Private Collection

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From Left: Vessel, 1960 and Slope II, 1961, both works Oil on panel

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Vessel, 1960, Oil on panel, 30 1/8″ x 21 7/8″, Private Collection

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Slope II, 1961, Oil on paper mounted on canvas, 40 1/2″ x 30 3/4″, Private Collection

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From left: Portrait I, 1965, Stranger, 1964 and Reverse, 1965 . All works Oil on Canvas

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Looking, 1964, Oil on Canvas, 67 7/8″ x 80 1/8″, Private Collection

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Painter III, 1963, Oil on Canvas, 66″ x 79″, Private Collection, London

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Untitled, 1967 – 1969, 48 Drawings, Charcoal and Ink on Paper, Variable Dimensions, Private Collection

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From left: Inhabiter, 1965, May Sixty-Five, 1965 and Afternoon, 1964

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May Sixty-Five, 1965, Oil on Canvas, 70″ x 80″, Lewis Family Collection

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Afternoon, 1964, Oil on Canvas, 74″ x 80 1/4″, Private Collection

András Böröcz: Profound Objects at Pavel Zoubok Gallery

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Here is a quick overview of András Böröcz’s terrific show at Pavel Zoubok Gallery during it’s recent run in New York. This eccentric and beautifully crafted show was the highlight of  a day of gallery visits in the city.

For more information about András Böröcz and Pavel Zoubok Gallery please check out the Pavel Zoubok Gallery website:

http://pavelzoubok.com/artist/andras-borocz/

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Construction Site at McKenzie Fine Art

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From Left: Eric Brown, Tilt, 2016 and Samantha Bittman Untitled 2016 and Untitled 2016

I always check out the shows at McKenzie Fine Art when I am in New York. I neglected to photograph some of the other great works in this show because I got distracted buying a small Lori Ellison drawing, so this post unfortunately omits the terrific work by Cathryn Arcomano, Mel Bernstine, Eric Brown, Kellyann Burns, Paul Corio, Liv Mette Larsen, Noah Loesberg, Erin O’Keefe, Laura Watt and Will Yackulic. My apologies to those artists. You can see installation views of the show and works from the above artists on the McKenzie Fine Art website.

http://www.mckenziefineart.com/exhib/CST2016exhb.html

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Samantha Bittman

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Samantha Bittman, Untitled 2016, Acrylic on hand woven textile, 20″ x 16″

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Don Voisine, Revolver, 2016, Oil on wood panel, 44″ x 44″

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Alton Sultan, Blue Squares, 2016, Hand dyed wool on linen, 10″ x 23.5″

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Christian Maychak, Compound Flat #46, 2015, Epoxy clay, pigment and wood, 45.5″ x 26.25″ x 1.5″

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Jason Karolak, Untitled (P-1608), 2016, Oil on linen over panel, 16″ x 14″

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Some Don Voisine’s and a Paul Corio in the back room.

JUSTINE HILL – They Just Behave Differently at Denny Gallery

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I really enjoyed Justine Hill’s show, They Just Behave Differently, at Denny Gallery in New York this past June. The show had a palpable energy and the pieces, mostly shaped canvasses, felt like visual thought bubbles; the painted expression of comic book style captions like “Pow”, “Bam” , “Zap and “@#*!” realized in paint.

For more information about Justine Hill please check out Denny Gallery’s website.

Justine Hill

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Quang Tri 1968 -1969 – 420 Days in a War by Wm. Marquez at Coachella Valley Art Center

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Quang Tri 1968 -1969 – 420 Days in a War by Wm. Marquez at Coachella Valley Art Center is the artist’s response to the 420 days he served  in a US military base in the north central region of Vietnam during the Vietnam War. The work, a meditation on the effect of war, poetically illustrates through the passage of time how war can change you. The piece illuminates the change inherent in experience beginning with a small mound of gravel, then marking each day served with small mounds of charcoal and ending with a mound that is a mixture of both.

For more information about the Coachella Valley Art Center please check out their Facebook page.

https://www.facebook.com/coachellavalleyartcenter/

 

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Length x Width x Depth at Conrad Wilde Gallery

For the last eleven years Conrad Wilde Gallery in Tucson, Arizona has hosted an annual exhibition devoted to works created from encaustic. This years Encaustic Invitational, Length x Width x Depth was terrific. Miles Conrad always does a great job of finding artists with unique voices, telling unique visual stories and he chooses works that are often surprising and engagingly tactile. And this years Invitational was no exception.

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For more information about Conrad Wilde Gallery please consult their website at http://www.conradwildegallery.org

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Sue Stover, Musings, 6 Pieces, Titles Various, 2015

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Winston Lee Mascarenhas, Cardboard Study 8, Encaustic on Cardboard, 10″ x 10″ x 3″, 2014

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Kathleen Cosgrove, Spiral with Antlers, Encaustic, Mixed Media, 9″ x 4″ x 4″,  2015

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Katie Gutierrez, Heliopora 1, Encaustic Sculpture, 19″ x 7″ x 20″, 2016

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Katie Gutierrez, Heliopora 3

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Alison Golder, Best Cocao, Wood, Metal & Encaustic, 15″ x 9″ x 5″, 2014

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Sue Katz, Moth Construct, Encaustic, Mixed Media, 35.5″ x 26″ x 3″, 2016

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Alison Golder, Processed and Pasteurized, Wood, Metal & Encaustic, 13″ x 5″ x 3″, 2014

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Alicia Forestall Boehm, The Power of Place , Encaustic, Fiber, Wire & Twine, 14″ x 9″ x 2″, 2014

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From Left to Right: Alicia Forestall Boehm, Jane Allen Nodine & Deborah Kapoor

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Jane Allen Nodine (Detail), Collected Oscula, Ablated Offerings & Selected Offerings,  Encaustic on Paper & Encaustic and Fiber, Works: 50″ x 4″ x 1″, 54″ x 4″ x 3″  , 48″ x 2″ x 2″, 2015

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Deborah Kapoor, Grief Diary, Paper, Cording, Encaustic & Fabric, 12″ x 12″ x 1″, 2015

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Beata Wehr, Letters From The Desert, Encaustic, Paper & Found Objects, 13″ x 17″, 2014

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Dietlind Vander Schaaf & Jennie Frederick

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Dietlind Vander Schaaf, Between, Encaustic, Oil and Graphite on Panel, 12″ x 12″ x 2″, 2016

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Jennie Frederick, Beached, Kozo Fiber, Encaustic & Zip Ties, 48″ x 11″ x 8″, 2014

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Deborah Winiarski and Milisa Galazzi

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Milisa Galazzi, String Theory – WD Four, Paper, Thread & Encaustic, 48″ x 24″ x 9″, 2015

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Deborah Winiarski, Lines Written III, Encaustic and Fiber on Panel, 37″ x 32″ 4″, 2015

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Kay Hartung, Orbs 1 – 6, Encaustic Mixed Media, Dimensions Variable, 2013 – 2015

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Kay Hartung, Orbs (Detail)

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Helen Dannelly, Untitled, Encaustic on Paper, 6″ x 6″ x 8″, 2013

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Laura Moriarty, Cleaved, Pigmented Beeswax, 24″ x 8″ x 4″, 2014

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Howard Hersh, Pulse, Encaustic on Panel, 21″ x 13″ x 3″, 2012

Barbara Ellmann: An Open Book 2 at the Marks Art Center

I had the great pleasure of seeing Barbara Ellmann’s dynamic exhibition, An Open Book 2, at the Walter N. Marks Center for the Arts in Palm Desert, California last month. The exhibition, which ran from February 4 to March 11, was partially funded by the McCallum Theatre Institute’s Aesthetic Education Program, produced in conjunction with the Marks Art Center at the College of the Desert and was beautifully curated by Sophia Marisa Lucas. The Marks always presents terrifically exciting, innovative shows and I am continually impressed by the quality of their curatorial focus. An Open Book 2 was no exception.

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For more information about the Marks Art Center and Barbara Ellmann:

http://www.collegeofthedesert.edu/community/gallery/Pages/default.aspx

https://barbaraellmann.com

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William Perehudoff at Berry Campbell Gallery

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I really enjoyed being introduced to William Perehudoff’s beautiful works on display at Berry Campbell Gallery in Chelsea. Perehudoff, a Canadian artist who died in 2013, was one of Canada’s foremost abstract colorfield painters. You can find more information on Perehudoff’s work on the Berry Campbell website and there’s also an interesting interview with the artist on youtube.

http://www.berrycampbell.com/artist/William_Perehudoff%20(Estate)/works/#!1090

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Seeing Differently

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Joan Miró, Man and Woman in Front of Pile of Excrement, 1935, Oil on Copper, 23 x 32cm

Great work can open your eyes, and Joan Miró’s Man and Woman in Front of Pile of Excrement opened mine to modern art. I first saw the painting in Scotland in 1980 when I was 14 years old. I remember laying eyes on it and feeling the room shift. Artistically, this small painting on copper was tantamount to a new pair of glasses. It was the visual equivalent of someone smacking me on the face and saying, “Snap out of it!” or my first great kiss. I engaged the world differently after experiencing it. I saw myself in the world differently.

 I was visiting my Scottish Grandmother at the time, and she was horrified at my fascination with this work. I couldn’t stop looking at it. It was like looking into my own reflection, at times beautiful, subversive, rude, familiar and yet grotesque. It encapsulated the way I felt at 14.

I know now that the painting was one of twelve “Wild Paintings” that were Miró’s response to the tragedy of the Spanish Civil war. I knew none of that then. I just knew that this picture moved me. I left changed on exiting the gallery after seeing it.

I saw the painting again just recently while visiting the Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona. I turned a corner and there it was, suddenly, like a treasured mentor I hadn’t seen in decades and I wept. 36 years had passed since I had first seen that painting but I could still feel the way it moved me when I first looked upon it. Like opening a box of long lost journals it reminded me of the power of freshly seeing. The sensation of blinking until the world comes into focus. The power of looking.

My world, indeed the entire world, is much different now than it was almost 4 decades ago. But the power of seeing never changes, and looking, really looking can change the way we see.

http://www.fmirobcn.org/en/

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