Born in Portland, Maine, 1949
Studied at Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut (B.A., 1972; M.F.A., 1974)
Lives and works in New York City
2006 Statement
Mirrors and Echos
A suite of four color lithographs
In the process of painting Demons in Paradise (an exhibition of paintings in the fall of 2006) I generated a lot of ideas that fed directly into this suite of lithographs. The prints have a very informal, stripped down quality. In this sense they are very much of a piece with the paintings of the last year. All the drips and splashes are left as part of the image. They are not 'cleaned up' or made presentable. They bleed out into the border space and even off the edge of the paper.
The color is basic, utilitarian, unmixed, and sculptural. These are the colors of blood, earth, grass and sea. They are not used in relation to other colors, or as symbols. They represent themselves and retain the specific 'feel' of one hue with all its material and emotional qualities unmitigated. The title of the suite refers to structural manipulations both within each image as well as from image to image.
Selected Recent Exhibitions
| 2006 | Demons in Paradise, Von Lintel Gallery,
New York, New York Between The Lines, Drawings by Contemporary Artists, RxArt, Ralph Lauren, Miami, Florida New Editions, Brand X Projects, New York, New York New Monoprints, Pace Gallery, New York, New York |
| 2005 | Universal Medium, McClain Gallery, Houston, Texas Patterns and Grids, Pace Gallery, New York, New York Ideal: Selections from American Abstract Artists, Metaphor Contemporary Art, Brooklyn, New York |
| 2004 | Von Lintel Gallery, New York Schriftbilder Bilderschrift, Galerie von Bartha, Basel, Switzerland Summarize/Summer Eyes 2, Jan Weiner Gallery, Kansas City, Missouri |
| 2003 | American Beauty, McClain Gallery. Houston Thinking in Line, A Survey of Contemporary Drawing, curated by John Moore and Ron Janowich, University Gallery, University of Florida, Gainesville Under Pressure: Prints from Two Palms Press, Arthur A. Houghton Jr. Gallery, The Cooper Union. New York, New York Before and After Science, Marella Arte Contemporanea. Milan, Italy |
2003 Statement
Over the years printmaking had become and important part of my artmaking life. It was not something I had originally intended to pursue but, once I started, I loved everything about it: the process, the quality of the image, the excuse to use great paper, the chance to make my work in a social environment, having expert advice, and most important of all, not having to clean up!
I have always loved the look and feel of the litho stones themselves, so I came with the idea of looking for the broken and eccentric ones, then pushing them into a bunch and letting the decisions about drawing, structure and color some from the configuration. That is pretty much what happened. Most of these stones were initially occupied by some very beautiful Jim Dine drawings. I thnk Jim for relinquishing them even if he wasn't present for the decision.
Although I had the idea of how I would proceed before I got to the shop, what the image actually became was, as always, a surprise. I am reminded of performers who say that no matter how many times they go on stage they are always nervous beforehand. I never bring a pre-made image to the printshop with me. I approach the process of making prints the same way I do making paintings, so the improvisation and nervousness is always there. But this is the risk and the magic of making art. I wouldn't have it any other way.
1999 Statement
For some time my work has involved the tension between fragments
and wholes. I'm not exactly sure why I'm drawn to this quality except that it
seems to reflect the disparity between what we desire (wholeness) and what we
experience (fragment). The charm of lithography stones is precisely in those
aspects-the rough edges and imperfect shapes that remind you they are fragments
of some vast geological event. In any case, for my purposes, they make perfect
fragments, individually or in groups.
For this project, I chose two grouping of litho stones. Each grouping is made
up of three stones pushed together making a shaped configuration. I drew on
the stones with tusche and shop black. The imagery is new but is combined with
two notions that have dogged my work for years; namely, endless imagery (inspired
by Brancusi's columns) and the provisional shape of the support.
The drawing and the stone have an interesting relationship. The drawing knits
the parts together but by the same token exists above and separately from them
as well as beyond their natural edges. Likewise the individual fragmentary quality
of each stone is enhanced by the conditional nature of its place in the configuration.
As anyone who has worked with them knows, it is hard to compete with the beauty
and dignity of the stones themselves. So it is fitting that these six stones,
having completed their temporary tasks as receivers of fragmentary imagery,
will be ground to that original dignity again.
-David Row
Selected recent exhibitions
| 2003 |
Under Pressure: Prints from Two Palms Press,
Arthur A. Houghton Jr. Gallery, The Cooper Union, New York, traveled. |
| 2002 |
Galerie von Bartha, Basel, Switzerland |
| 2001 |
Kinds of Drawing, Herter Art Gallery, University of Massachusetts,
Amherst |
Selected public collections
Ackland Art Museum
Brooklyn Museum, New York
Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio
Galleria Nazionale D'Arte Moderna, San Marino, Republica di San Marino
Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire
Museum of Contemporary Art, San Diego, California
University of Massachusetts, University Gallery, Amherst, Massachusetts
University of Miami Art Gallery, Miami, Ohio
University of New Mexico Art Museum, Albuquerque, New Mexico
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
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Last updated:
4/3/09