Showing posts with label Joan Lyons. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Joan Lyons. Show all posts

18/11/18

Joan Lyons @ Steven Kasher Gallery, NYC

Joan Lyons 
Steven Kasher Gallery, New York 
November 15 - December 22, 2018 

Steven Kasher Gallery presents a major solo exhibition of pioneering feminist artist JOAN LYONS. Lyons (American, b. 1937) is one of the great unsung artists of her generation. The exhibition features nine of Joan Lyons’ pivotal photographic projects. This is the first gallery solo exhibition of the artist’s work since 2013. Joan Lyons’ groundbreaking work freely combines feminist theory and personal experience. Her work is intimate and introspective, questioning the indexical quality of photography.

Over the past six decades, Joan Lyons has employed a variety of difficult and obscure image-making processes. Her work spans a broad range of media including archaic photographic processes, pinhole photography, offset lithography, Xerography, screen-printing, and photo-quilt making. In the 1960s and 1970s, Joan Lyons was one of the earliest artists to adopt xerography as an artistic practice and was recognized as an innovator in the use of Haloid Xerox drawing as an image making process. In a 1982 artist statement Joan Lyons said “I work with what is available, a variety of optical devices. I work through complexity, to something simple and direct. This distillation process becomes more evident as time goes on. I work at those things that are evident; how I see, not conventions of seeing.”

Joan Lyons’ work defies every artistic taboo of the 1950s. She had been taught that contemporary art should be universal, gestural, abstract, monumental, qualities which are inherently masculine. After trying and failing to follow these mandates, Joan Lyons’ realized that her work could not be separated from her own experiences as a woman. Her personal narrative, different in content and tone from the dominant male voice, pushed her to establish new artistic structures.

Highlights from the exhibition include Untitled (Bedspread), 1969, the earliest work in the exhibition, is a sharp, ironic commentary on the status of women in the late 1960s. The repeated image of an anonymous, nude woman that has been screenprinted onto a fabric bedspread is a fierce response to the idea that women are best “barefoot and pregnant.” The work also references practices widely considered to be women’s work including sitchery, quilting and the “lesser” decorative arts.
 
In the Haloid-Xerox portraits, taken between 1972 and 1980, Joan Lyons’ utilized her own body in as a means of questioning photographic portraiture and female archetypes. The work is a deliberate attempt not to objectify women but to internalize their representation. Working in opposition to an instantaneous snapshot or a decisive moment, each image is a composite created over the course of many hours. The prints are the result of multiple transfers onto large sheets of paper using the original view-camera based flatbed Xerox equipment that yielded a carbon image on plain paper.

Artifacts, 1973, is a portfolio of 11 offset lithographs created in part as a response to Andy Warhol's soup can and other pop culture images. This body of work was informed by a desire to pay homage to the power objects in the artist’s home, items that ruled the artist’s everyday world.

Joan Lyons’ seminal 1974 work Prom is a ritual artifact, a trompe l’oeil deconstruction of her teenage daughter’s first prom dress. Like most of Joan Lyons’ work, Prom is conceptual and process based. The piece is comprised of six life-size sections of the dress, pressed like flowers onto six pages. The weave of the fabric itself replaces a conventional halftone screen, emphasizing the connection between printing and weaving. Prom was personal, concrete and feminine, a forceful contradiction of everything Lyons’ was taught that art should be.

In addition to her artistic practice, Joan Lyons was the Founding Director of the influential Visual Studies Workshop Press, 1972 – 2004. Under Joan Lyons’ direction, the VSW Press has been active in the evolution and definition of the field of artist’s books over the past three decades. Joan Lyons was responsible for the publication of over 450 artist’s books. The VSW Press also designed and produced books by photographers and writers, and titles relating to theory and historical inquiry in the visual arts. Joan Lyons is the editor of the highly influential annotated bibliography, Artist’s Books: Visual Studies Workshop Press, 1972–2008 (2009) and of Artist’s Books: A Critical Anthology and Sourcebook, (1986, 1988, 1991, 1993, 1995).

JOAN LYONS (b. 1937) completed a BFA at Alfred University, New York (1957), and an MFA at SUNY Buffalo, New York (1973). Since 1963 her work has been exhibited at major institutions worldwide including Museum of Modern Art, New York, Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, DeCordova Museum, Arts Council of Great Britain, Center for Creative Photography, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Museo de Arte Contemporaneo, Sevilla, Art Gallery of Ontario, National Gallery of Canada and the Bibliothéque Nationale de France. Lyons’ work is found in permanent collections including the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Minneapolis Institute of Art, Norton-Simon Museum, J. Paul Getty Museum, Yale University Art Gallery, DeCordova Museum, Museum of Modern Art, New York and the National Gallery of Canada. Lyons has published over 30 editions of her artist’s books since 1972. A retrospective exhibition, Maker/Mentor: Selected Work from Four Decades, appeared at the Rochester Contemporary Art Center in 2007.

STEVEN KASHER GALLERY
515 West 26th Street, New York, NY 10001

11/12/17

Phoenix Art Museum, The Logic of the Copy: Four Decades of Photography in Print - Photomechanical Printmaking from the Center for Creative Photography

The Logic of the Copy: Four Decades of Photography in Print
Photomechanical Printmaking from the Center for Creative Photography

Phoenix Art Museum

Through April 22, 2018


Andy Warhol
Andy Warhol
Sunset, 1972 
Screenprint
Collection Center for Creative Photography
© The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, Inc.

Phoenix Art Museum presents an exploration of the photographic revolution that began during the second half of the 20th century. The Logic of the Copy: Four Decades of Photography in Print spans the period from 1960 through the early 2000s and highlights the influence of artists as diverse as Robert Heinecken, Andy Warhol, Robert Rauschenberg, James Turrell, and Tacita Dean who began to integrate photography with text and the graphic arts. This explosion of photographic printing was a crucial factor in the transformation that took place in the art world during this time, from the democratization of the artistic economy to the conceptual shift toward cross-disciplinary forms of art. The exhibition is organized by Phoenix Art Museum in collaboration with its longtime partner, the University of Arizona’s Center for Creative Photography.

“We are delighted to continue the collaboration between the Museum and the Center for Creative Photography through this exhibition,” said Amada Cruz, the Sybil Harrington Director and CEO of Phoenix Art Museum. “It is a privilege to showcase the Center’s world-class collection in The Logic of the Copy, and we look forward to sharing these exciting, mixed-media works with our community.”


William Henry Jackson
William Henry Jackson
Utah. The Giant’s Club and Kettle, Green River, 1898
Photo-chromolithograph
Collection Center for Creative Photography.


Betty Hahn
Betty Hahn
Untitled (The Lone Ranger), 1976
Screenprint
Collection Center for Creative Photography
© Betty Hahn.

The hybrid process of photomechanical printmaking was an essential vehicle for change in the art world. Artists working during this period began turning away from Modernism and its emphasis on the essential qualities of and boundaries between different media, and toward the exploration of new forms across artistic disciplines. The explosive popularity of photomechanical printing among artists led to a wide range of multi-faceted, mixed-media works, exemplified by the selections featured in The Logic of the Copy: artist’s books and portfolios by artists hoping to expand their economic possibilities beyond the gallery system; large-scale prints by painters who were experimenting with photographs alongside more traditional media; and small works derived from commercial objects, from postcards and tarot cards to politically-charged images overlaid on magazines.

“The printmaking and photography booms are an especially crucial period of study, as the same concerns that motivated these artists are relevant in today’s digital environment,” said Andrew Kensett, curatorial assistant and the acting assistant curator at the Center for Creative Photography. “The practices of sharing images widely, using art as a medium for social and political engagement, and promoting the general democratization of art were at the forefront for artists working in print during this period, and their history is inextricably tied to our present moment.”


Joan Lyons
Joan Lyons
Untitled from the series Presences, 1980
Offset lithograph
Collection Center for Creative Photography
© Joan Lyons.


John Wood
John Wood
Untitled, 1980
Offset lithograph
Collection Center for Creative Photography
© John Wood.

Taking its title from a line in “Photography’s Expanded Field,” George Baker’s 2005 essay investigating the overlap between photography and related media, The Logic of the Copy brings together a wide range of artists who worked with photographs in print. In addition to the artists mentioned above, the exhibition will include examples of pioneering artist’s books by makers including John Baldessari, Susan King, Bruce Nauman, Ed Ruscha, Keith Smith, and Clarissa Sligh, and prints by Thomas Barrow, James Casebere, Jim Dine and Lee Friedlander, Betty Hahn, Mark Klett, Sherrie Levine, Sigmar Polke, and others.


Mark Klett
Mark Klett
Desert Citizens #45, 1989-90
Photogravure
Collection Center for Creative Photography
© Mark Klett.


Thomas Barrow
Thomas Barrow
Untitled from the series Studio Notes, 1992
Lithograph
Collection Center for Creative Photography
© Thomas Barrow.

This exhibition is organized by Phoenix Art Museum and made possible through the generosity of INFOCUS, the photography support group of Phoenix Art Museum.

PHOENIX ART MUSEUM
Norton Photography Gallery
www.phxart.org