Showing posts with label DC Moore Gallery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DC Moore Gallery. Show all posts

20/03/21

Carrie Moyer @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC - Analog Time

Carrie Moyer: Analog Time
DC Moore Gallery, New York
April 1 – May 1, 2021

Carrie Moyer
CARRIE MOYER
Hell’s Bells and Buckets, 2020
Acrylic and sand on canvas
66 x 60 inches
© Carrie Moyer, courtesy DC Moore Gallery 

Carrie Moyer
CARRIE MOYER
Analog #3, 2020
Mixed media, collage on paper
25 ½ x 19 ½ inches
© Carrie Moyer, courtesy DC Moore Gallery 

CARRIE MOYER’s use of abstraction continues to be a medium for sensations and this new body of work is a recollection of the last year spent largely in the twenty-five-block radius of her Brooklyn studio Analog Time references a new appreciation for the intensity of daily life and a new sense of time that has fused mind and body, memory and imagination, micro and macro.

Largely known for her exuberant colors, a number of paintings in this exhibition embrace a “down-shift” in palette, with Carrie Moyer embracing grey, navy, and deeper green tones that anchor or weave throughout layers of more saturated pigments, as in Hell’s Bells and Buckets (2020). Small, tactile imperfections placed on the surface appear granular under opaque shapes, signifying the artist’s hand purposefully disrupting the canvas.

Having spent time in Italy creating works on paper in the fall of 2019, Carrie Moyer returned inspired to further explore the medium’s capabilities for abstraction. These new works on paper are included in Analog Time. They were also a direct response to harshness and inequities of life beyond her studio. When speaking about this body of work, she states, “On paper, my fondness for a comic, sci-fi sensibility turned metaphysical and atmospheric through the repeated process of staining, salting, and spraying the surface with inks and water. Everything is saturated.”

Carrie Moyer
CARRIE MOYER
Galaxyhymne (Galaxy Hymn), 2021
Acrylic and glitter on canvas
66 x 60 inches
© Carrie Moyer, courtesy DC Moore Gallery 

CARRIE MOYER  is an artist and writer known for her sumptuous paintings on canvas, which explore and extend the legacy of American Abstraction while paying homage to many of its seminal female figures, among them Helen Frankenthaler, Elizabeth Murray, and Georgia O’Keeffe. Overflowing with visual precedents and recognizable forms, Carrie Moyer’s work proposes a new approach to fusing material experimentation and a passion for the history of painting into a highly original voice. In addition, Carrie Moyer’s work, is influenced by a background in design and queer activism. Carrie Moyer was featured in the 2017 Whitney Museum Biennial and has also been the subject of recent museum exhibitions such as Carrie Moyer: Pirate Jenny, Tang Museum, Sarasota Springs, NY (2013); Carrie Moyer: One Night Only, Dallas, TX (2019); Queer Abstraction, Des Moines Art Center, IA (2019); Carrie Moyer and Sheila Pepe: Tabernacles for Trying Times, Portland Museum of Art, ME (2020) which will travel to Museum of Art and Design, New York, NY in May of 2021.

DC Moore Gallery’s exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue Carrie Moyer: Analog Time.

A monograph on Carrie Moyer will be published in Fall of 2021 by Rizzoli.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011

21/07/20

Darren Waterston @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC - Notes from the Air

Darren WaterstonNotes from the Air
DC Moore Gallery, New York
Through October 3, 2020

Darren Waterston
DARREN WATERSTON
Symphonic Landscape, 2020
Oil on wood panel, 59.5 x 71. 5 inches
© Darren Waterston, Courtesy of DC Moore Gallery

DC Moore Gallery presents Darren Waterston: Notes from the Air, featuring all-new paintings by DARREN WATERSTON. The exhibition title is taken from a volume of selected late poems by John Ashbery, whose themes of nature, wonder, and experience continue to be an important influence on Darren Waterston’s work.

Darren Waterston’s paintings are a continuation of his uniquely descriptive approach to expressing states of consciousness, using the landscape as metaphor and poetic space. The works depict otherworldly environments - nature as a heady fever-dream, destabilized, and teeming with quiet activity. They are alluring and on the threshold of the recognizable and the fantastical.

Darren Waterston asserts the ever-present Surrealist impulse, having looked closely at the work of Hercules Segers, Max Ernst, and Odilon Redon while developing these paintings last winter. He remarks of his process:
“I often start out constructing a painterly description of space and spatiality, which may include sky, clouds, rocky cliffs, a verdant glade, but with every descriptive execution there is always the counterpart of abstraction and playful distortion of what is being depicted. I love the interchange between the beautiful and the monstrous.” -Darren Waterston
Darren Waterston
DARREN WATERSTON
Hymn no. 2, 2020
Oil on wood panel, 48 x 36 inches
© Darren Waterston, Courtesy of DC Moore Gallery

This sublimity is further underscored by shifting perspectives, geological, voluptuous forms morphing diaphanously, and fluid layers of deep, saturated color. Darren Waterston is especially interested in exploring how a profound sense of vastness can be achieved and expressed in smaller scale panels, on view for this exhibit.

DARREN WATERSTON graduated with a BFA from the Otis Art Institute/Parsons, having previously studied at the Akademie der Künste and the Hochschule für Bildende Künste, both in Germany. In 2020, the Victoria & Albert Museum in London opened Darren Waterston's Filthy Lucre: Whistler's Peacock Room Reimagined, a detailed and decadent interpretation of James Abbott McNeill Whistler's famed Peacock Room, a sumptuous 19th-century interior. 

Filthy Lucre was created by the artist in collaboration with MASS MoCA, North Adams, Massachusetts. His previous solo exhibition, Uncertain Beauty at MASS MoCA, North Adams, Massachusetts (2014-2015), ran concurrently with the exhibition that featured Filthy Lucre at Freer | Sackler Museum at the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (2015-2017).

Darren Waterston’s paintings are included in numerous permanent collections including the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; New York Public Library, New York City; The Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles; Seattle Art Museum, Seattle; and Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. The artist lives in New York City.

This exhibition runs concurrently with Valerie Jaudon: Prepositions.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
dcmooregallery.com

27/06/20

Valerie Jaudon @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC - Prepositions

Valerie Jaudon: Prepositions
DC Moore Gallery, New York
July 14 - October 3, 2020

Valerie Jaudon
VALERIE JAUDON
Adagio, 2018
Oil on linen, 72 x 54 inches
© Valerie Jaudon, Courtesy of DC Moore Gallery

VALERIE JAUDON’s recent paintings continue her longstanding examination, begun in the mid-1970s, of the bounded, yet infinitely expandable world of the finely wrought, intricate, and maze-like abstract image. This exhibition is titled Prepositions, and refers – obliquely of course – to a word or words governing, and usually preceding, a noun or pronoun and expressing a relation to another word or element in the clause. These paintings function as abstract connectors, as visual demonstrations of organizing, placing, locating, and explaining. Prepositions are most often simple words – “inside,” “outside,” “next to,” “before,” “after” – but they allow for complexity, accuracy, and comprehensibility.

Valerie Jaudon’s paintings are similarly complex, exact, and knowable. They combine clarity, flatness, precision, and ready apprehension with a slowed down, demanding part-to-part, part-to-whole read. It is an arena where sensual, carefully worked and refractive surfaces push up against the steady rhythm of structured lines – forms laid out in arrays that seem to be on one hand perfectly logical and legible, useful and practical (in a metaphorical way), and on the other, tantalizingly elusive and austerely romantic. Most of her titles come from the world of music, and the musical underpinnings of her work show themselves in multifaceted contrapuntal organizations combined with visually melodic passages nearly undone by carefully implanted dissonance, and by the persistence of organizing themes and articulated movements. A simplified palette, evocative of the classical world – white, black, the rich umber of exposed linen, the occasional blued steel gray – gives the work a certain deliberate (and deliberative) cadence and calm. It turns the eye to the painting as a whole, away from the artist’s evident virtuosity and steady hand, her involvement in every part of the carefully crafted object.

Valerie Jaudon
VALERIE JAUDON
Sonatina, 2018
Oil on linen, 60 x 72 inches
© Valerie Jaudon, Courtesy of DC Moore Gallery

This work has been long in the making and Prepositions is the latest phase of a career that has approached painting with the gravity and seriousness it deserves, but also with a sense of playfulness, pleasure, and visual wit. These are paintings to think about, experience, and enjoy.

VALERIE JAUDON is the recipient of numerous awards and grants and her work has been collected by and exhibited in major museums. Among them are The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington DC; McNay Art Museum, San Antonio; St. Louis Art Museum, St. Louise; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; Städel Museum, Frankfurt, Germany; the Louisiana Museum of Modern art, Humlebaeck, Denmark; Ludwig Forum Internationale Kunst, Aachen, Germany.

Recent museum exhibitions including Valerie Jaudon’s work include With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972-1985, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA (2019-2020); Less is a Bore: Maximalist Art & Design, Institute for Contemporary Art, Boston, MA (2019); Pattern and Decoration: Ornament as Promise, Ludwig Forum, Aachen, Germany, traveled to mumok Vienna and Ludwig Museum, Budapest, Hungary (2018-2019); Pattern, Decoration & Crime, MAMCO, Geneva, Switzerland, traveled to Le Consortium, Dijon, France (2018-2019).

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
dcmooregallery.com

16/02/20

Romare Bearden @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC - Abstract

Abstract Romare Bearden
DC Moore Gallery, New York
February 13 – March 28, 2020

DC Moore Gallery presents Abstract Romare Bearden, featuring rarely-seen stain and collaged paintings from 1958-1962 by one of the most renowned visual artists of the 20th century. Also on view, will be selected works from earlier and later periods. The abstract paintings shed light on Romare Bearden’s continual interest in experimental techniques. They also provide new context to the influence his earlier work had on this period, and how these seminal paintings contributed to the development of his later well-known collages.

After painting and drawing for nearly two decades, the noted African American artist Romare Bearden (1911-1988) turned to songwriting for a few years in the early 1950s. When he began painting again in earnest around 1955, his work was more abstract than previously, as he explored new modes of expression. At first, he layered paint thickly, in abstracted figural works that were increasingly less representational than what he had been doing in the 1940s.

By 1957, Romare Bearden had moved to pure abstraction. His dynamic new canvases were larger, all-over paintings of organic, atmospheric forms, merging and coalescing. A critic noted in an exhibition review, “they are full of suggestions of stratified earth, subaqueous suspensions and clear auroras of atmosphere.”[i] As with Heart of Autumn (c. 1960), he created active surfaces and rich tonal effects with paint that flows across the canvas or is worked in several different ways. In others, he began to use collage elements of painted, torn paper or applied canvas. The underlying canvas plays an important role in many of the works, too, as the paint is often thinly applied, resulting in lyrical abstractions of distinctive beauty.

In most cases, Romare Bearden painted unstretched canvas rolled out on the floor, like some of his Abstract Expressionist contemporaries. He frequently worked from all four sides, sometimes lifting the canvas so that paint flowed freely. He rubbed turpentine onto a freshly painted surface as well, thinning it so that only a few stains remained. Repeating the process two or three times, he gradually built the composition. Spatters, slashes, and drips were another aspect of his method. 

Not only was Romare Bearden well aware of contemporary practice, but he had also been involved with some of the artists of the evolving Abstract Expressionist group since his return to New York from military service in the mid-1940s. He joined the Kootz Gallery in 1945 and had three consecutive solo shows there. At the time, Samuel Kootz also represented Robert Motherwell, Adolph Gottlieb, and William Baziotes, among others, and showed the work of Arshile Gorky and Hans Hofmann. Kootz had group meetings with the artists on a regular basis, so Romare Bearden would have had many opportunities to discuss their current work as well as his own.

In light of this, it is not surprising that when he started painting again in the mid-1950s after his brief excursion into songwriting, Romare Bearden largely set aside his earlier figural modernism and turned to abstraction. Foregoing thematic content—except what is suggested by the evocative titles that he and his wife, Nanette, gave to the works—he began painting freely and on a larger scale, embracing a more intuitive approach based on improvisation and chance. 

For the most part, though, he chose not to pursue the subconscious probing and automatic drawing of the Surrealists that inspired many of the Abstract Expressionists. Instead, his new method resonated with the Zen Buddhist concepts of no-mind and emptiness, which focus on a state of awareness and flow of attention beyond the ego, and, in the case of painting, beyond any conscious effort to create a predetermined composition or result. Merging with his other interests, Romare Bearden’s increasing involvement with Zen and some of the arts related to it created a powerful new current in his art.

Soon after he and Nanette moved to a loft on Canal Street in 1956, Romare Bearden met a calligrapher and scholar of Chinese art named Mr. Wu who had a bookstore in the neighborhood. For the next few years, he studied informally with him, meeting about once a week for discussions of Chinese painting and the principles of calligraphy. He also explored the Buddhist philosophy that underlies them. Bearden discovered that, in his words, “underneath the seeming simplicity was a great, long tradition, and a very complex one, in which so much had been taken away to find the essence of the landscape.”[ii] And, as he later recalled,
“I was also studying…the techniques which enable Chinese classical painters to organize their large areas, for example: the device of an open corner to allow the observer a starting point in encompassing the entire painting; the subtle ways of shifting balance and emphasis; and the use of voids, or negative areas, as sections of passivity and as a means of projecting big shapes. … As a result, I began to paint more thinly, often on natural linen, where I left sections of the canvas unpainted so that the linen itself had the function of a color.” [iii]
His abstracts were featured in two solo New York exhibitions in 1961. Both shows were well received, as critics welcomed his return to painting. One noted that it was good to see an artist “once as well regarded as Romare Bearden exhibiting again.”[i] Elsewhere, Romare Bearden was characterized as “a virtuoso of texture and of sumptuous and subtle color if there ever was one.”[ii] The Museum of Modern Art acquired one of his 1959 abstractions, Silent Valley of the Sunrise, in 1960, after his first show, and in 1997, the Studio Museum of Harlem added a major example to its collection, North of the River (1962).

Romare Bearden continued painting abstracts until 1963, which was a momentous year for the artist and the nation. That summer the massive March on Washington, where Martin Luther King, Jr. gave his historic “I Have a Dream” speech, marked a new stage in the ongoing struggle for civil rights. In New York, Romare Bearden and several artists, including Hale Woodruff, Charles Alston, and Norman Lewis, formed the Spiral group in order to promote the work of black artists and explore ways in which they could contribute to the civil rights movement. This led directly to Romare Bearden’s return to figurative art in his collages and his celebrated black and white photostat enlargements, which he called Projections.

In all, though, this turn of events was not so much a dramatic break as an adjustment of focus. Writing in the late 1960s about his abstractions and use of collage, Romare Bearden noted that,
“Then in a transition toward what turned out to be my present style, I painted broad areas of color on various thicknesses of rice paper and glued these papers on canvas, usually in several layers. I tore sections of the paper away, always attempting to tear upward and across on the picture plane until some motif engaged me. When this happened, I added more papers and painted additional colored areas to complete the painting.”[iii]
While his collages after the mid-1960s consisted mainly of figurative elements cut from photographs and magazine illustrations, along with areas of solid color and surfaces worked in various ways, the technique that he used to construct them was one with which he had been experimenting for some time.

The same is true of his increasing emphasis on improvisation. Romare Bearden’s lifelong involvement with jazz and blues gave him a deep appreciation and understanding of its potential, and it had played a part in his art since at least the early 1940s. He often credited the modernist artist, Stuart Davis, with helping him recognize the relationship between certain jazz techniques and his artistic process.

Later in life, Romare Bearden told an interviewer that, “I now don’t ‘do’ a collage in the sense of rational, predetermined composition, I just invite some of the people I knew to come into the room and give it an ambiance.”[iv] While this is classic Romare Bearden commentary, it also reflects what he once recalled as Mr. Wu’s tendency to humanize every aspect of their conversations. As such, it highlights the ways in which Romare Bearden’s engagement with Abstract Expressionism merged with other aspects of his life experience and artmaking. His abstracts of the late 1950s and early 1960s stand as a singular achievement, a highly personal body of lyrical, poetic painting that continued to support and strengthen his work for years to come.

In 2018, Mary Schmidt Campbell authored An American Odyssey: The Life and Work of Romare Bearden, published by Oxford University Press. Recognized as one of the most original artists of the twentieth century, Romare Bearden has work in public collections across the country, and has had a number of major retrospectives. The Neuberger Museum presented new Bearden scholarship in their 2017 exhibition and publication, Romare Bearden: Abstraction. The American Federation of the Arts will travel a large version of this exhibition to American museums starting in 2020. In 2011, The Studio Museum presented a groundbreaking exhibition The Bearden Project, exhibiting over 100 artists, to showcase the vast influence Romare Bearden has had for generations, and in 2003 The National Gallery of Art presented The Art of Romare Bearden, which traveled to the San Francisco Museum of Art, CA, the Dallas Museum of Art, TX, the Whitney Museum of American Art, NY, and the High Museum of Art, GA.

[i] Brian O’Doherty, “Art: O’Keeffe Exhibition…Bearden and Resnick Works on View,” New York Times (April 17, 1961).
[ii] Quoted in Myron Schwartzman, Romare Bearden: His Life and Art (New York: Harry N. Abrams, 1990), p. 197.
[ii] Romare Bearden, “Rectangular Structure in My Montage Paintings,” Leonardo 2 (January 1969), p. 12.
[iv] Carlyle Burrows, “Bearden’s Return,” New York Herald Tribune (January 24, 1960).
[v] New York Times (January 23, 1960).
[vi] Bearden, p. 12.
[vii] Quoted in Schwartzman, p. 187.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
www.dcmooregallery.com

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14/05/19

David Driskell @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC - Resonance, Paintings 1965 - 2002

David Driskell: Resonance, Paintings 1965 - 2002
DC Moore Gallery, New York
Through June 8, 2019

David Driskell
DAVID DRISKELL
Ghetto Wall #2, 1970
Oil, acrylic and collage on linen
60 x 50 inches
© David Driskell, Courtesy DC Moore Gallery, New York

DC Moore Gallery presents David Driskell: Resonance, Paintings 1965-2002. David Driskell, soon to be 88, is a legendary African American artist and art historian. As an artist, scholar, and curator, he has made substantial contributions to these fields that have changed the way we think about American art. His paintings and collages unite a strong modernist impulse with his personal vision and memory. Marked by the artist’s abiding color sensibilities, his work bears the imprint of a turbulent era, a return to nature, and David Driskell’s synthesis of the European, American, and African art forms he knew firsthand.

The years between the March on Washington in 1963 and the end of the Vietnam War in 1973, galvanized by the Civil Rights Movement and often called the “turbulent decade,” represent a lived experience for David Driskell. Many of David Driskell’s works of the late 1960s through the 1970s clearly reflect the era of the Black Arts Movement and the Afrocentric impulses it advanced. But they are first and foremost individualized, personal responses by an artist of the era, not one constrained by it. In 1966, James Porter described David Driskell’s aesthetic responses as having the effect “of prayer and of emotional release instead of despair,” noting that, “such paintings are directional signals to action for those who…understand their symbolic language.” Equally important to his iconography were the first trips taken to the African continent, between 1969 and 1972. David Driskell returned with a deep appreciation and respect for African artistic traditions and iconography which began appearing in his work “as sites of memory rather than intrinsic forms,” as art historian Julie McGee has noted. David Driskell absorbs, distills, and recycles iconic African art forms into honorific personal visions – flattened, decorated, and resurfaced in his signature style, color and calligraphy. Yoruba Forms #5 (1969) exemplifies this response: an iconic, Christ-like figure, framed by a celestial orb, is universal and particular in its meaning. The conceptualization recalls David Driskell’s Behold Thy Son (1965, Collection of the National Museum of African American History and Culture), a tribute to Emmett Till, and Black Crucifixion (1964). A commanding image Shango (1972) reimagines a Yoruba ritual object, a carved dance wand (oshe shango) as a medieval or byzantine period icon, syncretic in meaning as well as form.

While works with overt protest are rare in David Driskell’s oeuvre, he found compelling reasons to initiate several works of sociopolitical commentary during the late 1960s and early 1970s. Important compositions in this vein include Ghetto Wall #2 (1970). David Driskell imagines a painting-within-a-painting: a mural that covers an inner-city brick wall, a distinctly American phenomenon that arose with the Civil Rights movement, as a community effort to counter blight in stressed neighborhoods. The form of the X appears, a mark symbolic in this work of Civil Rights leader Malcolm X, as David Driskell himself has noted. He also alludes to the American flag, its stripes appearing in two places on the canvas, and which also prefigure the African ribbon forms he would soon incorporate into other works.


David Driskell
DAVID DRISKELL
Current Forms: Yoruba Circle, 1969
Acrylic on canvas
44 1/4 x 34 inches
© David Driskell, Courtesy DC Moore Gallery, New York

The Black Arts Movement fostered a powerful trajectory toward Afrocentric subject matter in American art at the time. Not all artists followed this stream, but it was one David Driskell found absorbing. During his years teaching at Fisk University, expressive Blackness was in vogue, and David Driskell was fully at home in this arena, using African and African American themes seamlessly and often syncretically. He shared with Romare Bearden, whom he invited to Fisk in 1973, a mutual devotion to an iconography that was expressive of Black culture and fundamentally classic, as timeless and reusable as any within the art historical canon. Both artists created distinctive iconographies that drew upon African and American history, myth, and experience. Collage paintings by Driskell such as Jazz Singer (Lady of Leisure, Fox), from a 1970s series centered on Black womanhood, expand the representational scope of American art.

David Driskell was influenced by natural landscapes as well as urban landscapes. It was in 1980 that David Driskell completed a Yaddo residency which was particularly regenerative as it afforded him a chance to now harness the expressive, enduring spirituality that could be found in abstraction. These later works reveal David Driskell’s longtime affinity to textured collage elements and calligraphic mark making. Now, through layered cloth or torn paper strips and vibrant colors, he conveys multiple cultural and natural allusions, such as Bahian masking traditions. Bahian performers wear layers of colored cloth strips to convey prestige, wealth, and power as they dramatically oscillate along with the dancer’s dramatic movements. The bold, frenetic brushwork and dynamic color in Bahian Ribbons (1987) is a prime example of his later work echoing that tradition. The cloth strips are also meant to emulate the verticality of trees, which he views as symbols of shared histories. In the artist’s words, “Trees by their very nature connect past with present and bear witness to multiple histories and generations.” While the works appear as an aesthetic departure from earlier pieces, they are rather a reinvigoration of his established use of color, pattern, design, and collage, while maintaining his love of nature and African iconography.

David Driskell
DAVID DRISKELL
Ancient Alphabets, 1990
Encaustics and collage on paper
17 1/2 x 22 inches
© David Driskell, Courtesy DC Moore Gallery, New York

Through the 1980s to the present, David Driskell’s paintings and collages continued to move increasingly towards abstraction and a personal synthesis of place, memory, and spirit, incorporating his many interests including nature, music, and spirituality. The surfaces of these multi-layered works are heavily tactile with expressive mark making, pattern, and vibrant color. Two of the largest works in this exhibition, Linear Waves (1989) and In Search of My Mother’s Art II (1992), use abstract forms and markings to conjure up deep respect for his mother’s work with cloth, quilts, and sewing.

Born in 1931 in Eatonton, Georgia, DAVID DRISKELL received his BA in Fine Art from Howard University and MFA from Catholic University, both in Washington, D.C. He attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Skowhegan, Maine in 1953, and has retained a lifelong relationship with the school, serving as visiting faculty, lecturer, and board member. His pioneering scholarship underpins the current field of African American art history. In 1977, after having taught at Howard and Fisk Universities, David Driskell joined the Department of Art at the University of Maryland where he remained until his retirement in 1998.

His numerous awards and honors include the prestigious National Humanities Medal in 2000. The University of Maryland opened The David C. Driskell Center for the Study of the Visual Arts and Culture of African Americans and the African Diaspora in 2001 to celebrate his legacy as an artist and art historian. In 2005, the High Museum, in Atlanta, established an annual award in his honor, The David C. Driskell Prize, given to an African American artist or scholar. In 2016, the artist received the Skowhegan Lifetime Legacy Award. His work can be found in many museum collections including The National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC; High Museum of Art, Atlanta; The Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven; The Hood Museum of Art at Dartmouth College, NH; Colby College Museum of Art, ME; The Portland Museum of Art, ME; and The Smithsonian Museum of African American History and Culture, Washington D.C.

David Driskell lives and works in Hyattsville, Maryland and Falmouth, Maine.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
www.dcmooregallery.com

13/03/19

Claire Sherman @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC

Claire Sherman: New Pangaea
DC Moore Gallery, New York
Through April 6, 2019

DC Moore Gallery presents Claire Sherman: New Pangaea, an exhibition of large-scale landscape paintings by Claire Sherman. Claire Sherman’s current works represent the natural world in a manner that makes her landscapes both recognizable and utterly imaginative, inviting yet daunting. The distorted palette of deep blues and greens creates an enhanced vividness that is in tension with the dense mesh of branches broken and askew, and leaves and plants twisted and overgrown. Independent curator Melissa Messina describes Claire Sherman’s paintings as, “vast entanglements, synthesized mixes of plant life and geographical phenomena that in their detail maintain a sense of specificity but in combination intentionally do not scribe an exact location. They are every place at once or no place at all.”

The exhibition’s title comes from the writings of environmental author Elizabeth Kolbert who has described the consequences of global travel and trade as “reshuffling of the biosphere that is bringing all of the worlds flora and fauna together,” thereby creating another super-continent, New Pangaea. Sherman both witnesses and explores extremes of climate change and the effects of invasive species crowding out native ones. There is a cycle of invasiveness, chaos, and growth, ever present in the paintings, as seen by nature’s tangled, undulating forms that flow off the canvas, and the roaring waterfalls that come crashing towards the viewer. The idea of a new environmental order, beautiful yet ominous, has become central to Claire Sherman’s body of work.

Claire Sherman’s method of painting is clear and direct. She avoids the overworked and achieves a surface imbued with a sense of ease and speed, open to imperfection. In all of her work, sustained research, reading, travel, and photography inform the act of painting.

CLAIRE SHERMAN has exhibited widely throughout the United States and in Amsterdam, Leipzig, London, Seoul, and Turin. She has completed residencies at the Terra Foundation for American Art in Giverny, the MacDowell Colony, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Workspace program, the Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation, Yaddo, and the Albers Foundation. She graduated with an MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2005. She was recently included in the exhibition American Genre: Contemporary Painting at the ICA at Maine College of Art, curated by Michelle Grabner. Claire Sherman is an Associate Professor at Drew University in New Jersey.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
www.dcmooregallery.com

12/03/19

Milton Avery @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC

Milton Avery: A Selection of Paintings
DC Moore Gallery, New York
Through April 6, 2019

DC Moore Gallery presents Milton Avery: A Selection of Paintings featuring four important works Milton Avery made between 1947-1960.

In the pantheon of twentieth century art, Milton Avery stands alone. Never persuaded by the artistic trends, movements, and manifestoes that surrounded him, Milton Avery’s commitment to his personal aesthetic was resolute. Beginning as a figurative painter, his work moved towards abstraction without ever fully relinquishing its verisimilitude. His superior use of color combined with prescience for arranging forms on canvas amounted to an evocative and singular visual language.

The major paintings presented here derive from the heart of his career. The influence of Milton Avery’s longstanding practice of organizing brief and insouciant sketch sessions with fellow artists, where they drew from life invited models who were not professionals, but rather friends, is evidenced in Pink Nude (1947) and Nude Before Screen (1949), which were likely painted after one of these sittings. Yellow Robe (1960), a portrait of his wife Sally, likewise displays Milton Avery’s interest in the human form, and exemplifies his mastery of color, not to mention the artist’s characteristic, wry humor. And in Fresh Strawberries (1949), Milton Avery draws a deep psychological component from a still life of a colander of berries, sitting atop a summer table.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
www.dcmooregallery.com

11/02/19

Jacob Lawrence @ DC Moore Gallery, NYC

Jacob Lawrence: The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture
DC Moore Gallery, New York
Through March 2, 2019

Jacob Lawrence
JACOB LAWRENCE
General Toussaint L'Ouverture, 1986
Silk screen on paper, 28 3/8 x 18 1/2 inches
© Jacob Lawrence, Courtesy DC Moore Gallery, New York

DC Moore Gallery presents Jacob Lawrence: The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture, a complete set of prints created by the artist between 1986 and 1997, rarely appearing together.

The prints are derived from 41 tempera paintings completed in 1938 comprising The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture, which is now in the collection of the Amistad Research Center at Tulane University in New Orleans. Jacob Lawrence translated 15 of these paintings into silk screen prints, all included in this exhibition. Jacob Lawrence’s strong angular figuration as well as his bold use of color expressively depict the life of L’Ouverture and his struggle against slavery and oppression as leader of the Haitian Revolution.

Born a slave in 1743, L’Ouverture participated in the rebellion from its beginnings and rose to become commander-in-chief of the revolutionary army. He led the campaign in 1800 to draft Haiti’s first democratic constitution. In 1802 Toussaint was arrested by Napoléon Bonaparte’s troops and sent to Paris, where he was imprisoned and died a year later, only shortly before Haiti became the first black Western republic in 1804.

Jacob Lawrence
JACOB LAWRENCE
The March, 1995  
Silkscreen on rising two ply rag paper, 18 x 28 inches
© Jacob Lawrence, Courtesy DC Moore Gallery, New York

The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture, 1936–38, was the artist’s first narrative series and predates such other well-known early series as The Life of Frederick Douglass, 1939; The Life of Harriet Tubman, 1940 (both Hampton University Museum); and The Migration Series, 1941 (MoMA and The Phillips Collection). By retelling a Haitian narrative from more than a century earlier, Lawrence was able to advance his unique exploration of black cultural expression and pride. Jacob Lawrence’s choice to revisit the story of L’Ouverture five decades later proves how deeply the series’ themes resonated for the artist.

While Jacob Lawrence frequently chose to treat Black historical subject matter, his aesthetic was always resolutely modern. Whether drawing attention to leaders of the past or depicting the everyday challenges of African-American life in his day, Lawrence saw his art as a means to underscore the universality of shared experience. His work is direct and forceful, in keeping with his lasting conviction that art can affect social change. Patricia Hills, author of Painting Harlem Modern: The Art of Jacob Lawrence, writes, “although the work is often specific in its references to historical figures, such as Toussaint L’Ouverture, Frederick Douglass, John Brown, or Harriet Tubman, the ethical message addresses the aspirations of all humankind.”

JACOB LAWRENCE (1917–2000) is one of the most prominent American painters of the twentieth century, and his work is held in public collections throughout the country. Other major traveling exhibitions of Lawrence’s work have been presented in museums across the country, including The Seattle Museum of Art, The Hampton University Museum in Virginia, The Phillips Collection in Washington, DC. Recent exhibitions include One Way Ticket: Jacob Lawrence’s Migration Series at The Museum of Modern Art in New York (2015) and Between Form and Content: Perspectives on Jacob Lawrence and Black Mountain College at The Black Mountain College Museum and Arts Center in Asheville, NC (2018–19). In 2017, The Phillips Collection (Washington, DC) and The Amistad Research Center (Tulane University, LA) presented exhibitions of the Toussaint L’Ouverture prints.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
www.dcmooregallery.com


27/04/14

Mark Innerst, DC Moore Gallery, NYC

Mark Innerst
DC Moore Gallery, New York
April 24 - May 31, 2014

DC Moore Gallery presents an exhibition of new work by MARK INNERST. A catalogue with an essay by Edward Burns is published.

MARK INNERST
DC Moore Gallery, 2014
Essay by Edward Burns
32 pages

Mark Innerst is a painter who transforms the urban and rural landscape, investing it with a radiant beauty and complexity. Cities like New York and Philadelphia can simultaneously appear majestic, immense, and serene, as streetscapes become a series of soaring verticals or stacked, layered blocks of color. Buildings curve overhead or sweep downward to street level, where human activity is reduced to blurs of light and movement.

In his new Midtown series, inspired in large part by the towers that line Manhattan’s Sixth Avenue in the forties and fifties, as well as in his paintings of downtown Philadelphia, Mark Innerst reduces architecture to abstracted elements, stripes and geometric shapes, that recede in rhythmic progressions to either an opening at the end of an urban canyon or the façade of another building, closing the view in upon itself.

Mark Innerst also paints panoramic vistas of rivers and estuaries, atmospheric landscapes intersected by prismatic hues that create bold visual effects. By emphasizing the refraction of light in these luminous environments, some of which include industrial buildings on a low horizon in the distance, he invites us to reflect on the interplay between an idealized landscape and the modern world.

From his exacting use of glazes to his handmade frames, Mark Innerst adapts tradition to his contemporary intentions. In his new work, he continues to draw upon the great tradition of nineteenth century European and American painting and the structural and expressive use of color as explored in mid-twentieth-century abstraction, as Edward Burns notes in his catalogue essay. His paintings are vibrant and inventive, anchored in his immediate environment, while at the same time, transcending everyday perception with a dynamic vision of the modern world.

MARK INNERST lives and works in Philadelphia, PA, and Cape May, NJ. After graduating from Kutztown State College in Pennsylvania in 1980, he moved to New York City, where he began to pursue his career. Since then, he has exhibited widely and has had one-person shows at Gallery Alain Noirhomme in Brussels, Belgium; and Emilio Mazzoli Galleria d’Arte Contemporanea in Modena, Italy; as well as at the Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston; Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. His work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Brooklyn Museum, and Albright-Knox Art Gallery, among others.

DC MOORE GALLERY
535 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
www.dcmooregallery.com