Free Updates
Let us tell you when new posts are added!
Email:
Click to subscribe via RSS
Navigation
Blog Home
The Artist's Magazine Home
ArtistsNetwork
Meet the Staff
Categories
November, 2008 (9)
October, 2008 (17)
September, 2008 (9)
August, 2008 (11)
July, 2008 (13)
June, 2008 (14)
May, 2008 (15)
April, 2008 (16)
March, 2008 (16)
February, 2008 (20)
January, 2008 (19)
December, 2007 (16)
November, 2007 (17)
October, 2007 (21)
September, 2007 (12)
August, 2007 (13)
July, 2007 (8)
June, 2007 (13)
May, 2007 (15)
April, 2007 (4)
Advice
By Chris McHugh
By Grace Dobush
By Holly Davis
By Lisa Wurster
By Maureen Bloomfield
Cool Web sites
Downloads
Exhibits
Free Stuff
News
Notable Artists
Photography
Projects
Random Thoughts
Shows and Events
Tips
Videos
Search
<
November 2008
>
Sun
Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
26
27
28
29
30
31
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
1
2
3
4
5
6
Blogroll
A Plein Air Painter's Blog
Anatomy of Art Materials
Art News blog
Arts Journal
Creativity Journey
Guardian Arts blog
Laketrees
Making a Mark
Painting at the End of the World
Pastel Journal
Sixty Minute Artist
The Art Law Blog
Watercolor Artist
Tuesday, February 26, 2008
Diebenkorn in New Mexico
(Note from Grace: Maureen, the editor of
The Artist's Magazine
, spent last weekend in NYC and has oodles of art experiences to write about. Keep watching this week for more stories from her!)
Image at right:
Untitled/Albuquerque
(1952, oil on canvas, 69x60); The Buck Collection, Laguna Beach, California
Last Thursday I was in Manhattan and had a chance to catch
“Diebenkorn in New Mexico”
at the Grey Gallery at New York University (January 25 through April 5).
Richard Diebenkorn
(1922-1993) was an artist identified with the California landscape as revealed and transformed in his
Ocean Park
series (1967-1978). Although characterized as an Abstract Expressionist, he worked with the figure (some of his ink drawings of nudes were on display at the
Art Show organized by the Art Dealers Association of America
at the Armory, February 21 to 25), and felt an intense connection to the landscape, perhaps because he’d worked as a cartographer while serving in the Marines.
“Diebenkorn in New Mexico” presents 50 paintings and works on paper that chronicle two years in the artist’s life, 1950-52, when he enrolled (through the GI bill) at the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque. To pursue a graduate degree, he gave up a position teaching painting at the California School of Fine Arts, now the San Francisco Art Institute.
The pictures from New Mexico are all interesting and many are gorgeous. The watercolor and gouache studies are especially lush and affecting; the drawings in Sumi ink show a young artist becoming fluent in a lyrical but bold calligraphic line. While the palette of the
Ocean Park
series is glacial—blue, green, white—the New Mexico pictures evince a less subtle range of colors, as Diebenkorn reacted to the desert terrain. Both the New Mexico and
Ocean Park
paintings are informed by aerial views; in the case of the New Mexico paintings, these gestures are often brash and sometimes inchoate. Fifteen years later these expressionist marks would be resolved in the transcendently formal
Ocean Park
where space is divided in what seem to be infinitely rational but rhapsodic progressions.
The Grey Gallery show originated at the Harwood Museum of Art at the University of New Mexico. Accompanying this show is a
beautiful catalogue
with essays by Gerald Nordland, Mark Lavatelli, Charles Strong and Charles Muir Lovell.
The Green Huntsman
(1952, oil on canvas, 43x70); private collection
Richard Diebenkorn and a mural painted for Joan Evans in the Old Town district of Albuquerque, 1950-52 (paint on plaster wall, approximately 60x120). This mural no longer exists, as it has been painted over.
By Maureen Bloomfield
|
Notable Artists
|
Shows and Events
2/26/2008 4:18:20 PM (Eastern Standard Time, UTC-05:00)
Comments [0]
Name
E-mail
Home page
Remember Me
Comment (HTML not allowed)
Enter the code shown (prevents robots):