Harriet Korman
Notes on Painting 1969 – 2019
Thomas Erben Gallery, New York
Through December 19, 2020
Thomas Erben presents Notes on Painting: 1969 -2019, Harriet Korman‘s second show with the gallery, which features some of her seminal paintings from the early ’70s and trace her development until 2019 (an exhibition of her most recent work will then follow in fall of 2021). At the very onset of her career, Harriet Korman’s work was widely noticed which led to exhibitions with Galerie Rolf Ricke (Cologne), 112 Greene Street (New York), Daniel Weinberg (San Francisco), and Galerie m in Bochum (with Frank Stella).
Her paintings were also included in the 1972 Whitney Annual, as well as the 1973 and 1995 Whitney Biennials and were part of High Times, Hard Times: New York Painting, 1967-1975 in 2007. Critical praise, as well as a devoted following amidst her peers, have always accompanied her development.
Harriet Korman’s “scrape paintings” which she began in 1969 – large canvases traversed with crayon lines, covered with gesso and then scraped through with a piece of wood or trowel to reveal some of the lines underneath – led Roberta Smith to rate her 1975 Greene Street Gallery show “as one of this year’s best in its own, modest, youthful way” (Artforum, Sept. ’75). She particularly noted the artist’s confident touch and nonchalance, qualities that are consistent throughout her work.
Also during the early ’70s, Harriet Korman produced taped, hard-edge paintings on unprimed canvas – sort of facsimiles of the gesso process paintings. She even built structures out of wooden bars, drawing her brush across them, the result replicating the scrape off paintings in reverse.
In 1977, finding the systematic nature of the process limiting, she switched to oils for more flexibility, change, and exploration. She felt that “what happens while you paint is more interesting than what you think before you paint” (1). As she continued, her work developed into distinct groups every few years.
A pivotal moment occurred in 1996 after completing a black and white series. Her color seemed to offer less contrast by comparison, and she decided to paint without adding any white. This also reinforced her interest in painting without any recognizable elements, light, or space aiming for “the paintings to be an example of things as they are” (2). Even with that limitation, the subsequent multiple series have developed with great variation – organic shapes and gestures, geometric configurations and structures – sustaining her ever since.
This first survey of Harriet Korman’s work allows an insight into a lifelong project about which Raphael Rubinstein remarked “You can only make paintings like Korman’s if you have faith that you can channel visual verities greater than your own individual style. It’s also generally true that you can only make paintings like this if you have been at it for a long time” (3).
Harriet Korman published an illustrated catalogue with personal statements to accompany the exhibition.
(1) Korman, Harriet. 3 Drawings from 1971, information for a group exhibition in 2018, Notes on Painting, 1969-2019, unpaginated, 2020
(2) Korman, Harriet. Grant application, Career Narrative, 2013, Notes on Painting, 1969-2019, unpaginated, 2020.
(3) Rubinstein, Raphael. Harriet Korman: Permeable/Resistant, Brooklyn Rail, Art Seen, Dec. 11, 2018.
THOMAS ERBEN GALLERY
526 West 26th Street, floor 4, New York, NY 10001
____________________