A two-part exhibition that features a selection of oil paintings and sculptural spheres installed in the Neuberger Klein Family Gallery and in the Center Gallery Courtyard. The recent paintings, which are executed in Knowlton's signature gestural and abstract style, reflect silhouettes of various furnishings intersecting corners in her studio and other rooms in her home in the Palisades on the west bank of the Hudson River.
A Two-part Exhibition
From May 26 through August 18, 2002 the Neuberger
Museum of Art will feature Grace Knowlton, a two-part
exhibition that features a selection of oil paintings and
sculptural spheres installed in the Neuberger Klein Family
Gallery and in the Center Gallery Courtyard. The recent
paintings, which are executed in Knowlton's signature
gestural and abstract style, reflect silhouettes of various
furnishings intersecting corners in her studio and other
rooms in her home in the Palisades on the west bank of
the Hudson River
In these works, Knowlton's line is boldly marked on softly
toned four-panel canvases to create energetic and quirky
abstractions that recall the automatic writing of Surrealists
and first generation Abstract Expressionists.
The artist's spheres are loosely composed from white
sheets of pliable materials glued and taped together to
hold images of Knowlton's photography, which she has
applied to the surface in a photo-transfer process.
Knowlton began her career as a painter in the 1960s. After
her move to New York, she set up a studio in a coal bin
and began making increasingly three-dimensional paintings.
Since then, she has traveled freely through various art
forms, methods and materials. While pregnant, Knowlton
became fascinated with sealing space inside clay forms,
beginning her love affair with the sphere. When she
resumed painting, she used her spherical surfaces as
canvases, gradually opening up the spheres, flattening
them into shards, and returning them to the wall as
paintings.
Grace Knowlton holds a BA degree in Art from Smith
College and a Master of Arts in Art and Education from
Columbia University Teachers College. She has had
numerous solo exhibitions in museums and galleries
throughout the country. Her work is in the permanent
collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, The
Brooklyn Museum of Art; Storm King Art Center,
Mountainville, NY; the Center for Creative Photography,
Tucson, AZ; the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, DC;
Houston Museum of Fine Arts, TX; and Jacksonville Art
Museum, FL.
In the picture: 'Interior 01', Digital photo.
This exhibition is supported, in part, by the Westchester
Arts Council with funds from Westchester County
Government, and the Friends of the Neuberger Museum of
Art.
Neuberger Museum of Art
Purchase, NY, USA