News

News: Female Artists Are (Finally) Getting Their Turn, March 29, 2016 - Hilarie M. Sheets for The New York Times

Female Artists Are (Finally) Getting Their Turn

March 29, 2016 - Hilarie M. Sheets for The New York Times

Starting on June 12, “Women of Abstract Expressionism” will spotlight virtual unknowns like Judith Godwin and Perle Fine, alongside the handful who broke through, including Joan Mitchell and Helen Frankenthaler. Ms. Chanzit’s research convinced the museum to acquire seven canvases in the show.

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News: Exhibition of works by Raymond Hendler, March 20, 2016 - Artdaily.org

Exhibition of works by Raymond Hendler

March 20, 2016 - Artdaily.org

A first-generation action painter, Raymond Hendler started his career as an Abstract Expressionist in Paris, as early as 1949. In the years that followed, he played a significant role in the movement, both in New York, where he was the youngest voting member of the New York Artist’s Club and a friend of Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, Jackson Pollock, and Harold Rosenberg and in Philadelphia, where he ran an avant-garde gallery between 1952 and 1954. 

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News: JILL NATHANSON POURS SEDUCTIVE POLYMERS, March 16, 2016 - Jamie de Simone for MoCA Jacksonville

JILL NATHANSON POURS SEDUCTIVE POLYMERS

March 16, 2016 - Jamie de Simone for MoCA Jacksonville

Nathanson constructs color fields of acrylic polymer gels. I immediately Googled images on my iPhone after my conversation. Interesting was my immediate reaction, but “interesting” is my “go-to” word, my word when I don't yet know how to describe an object, but think something deeper, richer is occurring. Nathanson's work was, and is, interesting, but I couldn't come to describe the “why” until I saw the paintings firsthand.

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News: Raymond Hendler Opens at Berry Campbell, March 14, 2016 - Artfix Daily

Raymond Hendler Opens at Berry Campbell

March 14, 2016 - Artfix Daily

Berry Campbell is pleased to announce an focused exhibition of over sixteen paintings and works on paper by Raymond Hendler (1923-1998) from the 1970s.  The exhibition opens on March 17, 2016 and runs through April 16, 2016 with an opening reception on Thursday, March 17 from 6 to 8 pm.

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News: Noah Becker Visits the New York Studio of Artist Jill Nathanson, March 10, 2016 - Noah Becker for Whitehot Magazine of Contemporary Art

Noah Becker Visits the New York Studio of Artist Jill Nathanson

March 10, 2016 - Noah Becker for Whitehot Magazine of Contemporary Art

Noah Becker Visits the New York Studio of Artist Jill Nathanson

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News: Charlotte Park's Paintings Wow in New York, March  7, 2016 - Jennifer Landes for The East Hampton Star

Charlotte Park's Paintings Wow in New York

March 7, 2016 - Jennifer Landes for The East Hampton Star

With so much going on during Armory Week in Manhattan, you can be forgiven for not getting to the Charlotte Park survey on view at the Berry Campbell gallery in Chelsea, but it's really your loss.

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News: Charlotte Park's Paintings Wow in New York, March  7, 2016 - Jennifer Landes for East Hampton Star

Charlotte Park's Paintings Wow in New York

March 7, 2016 - Jennifer Landes for East Hampton Star

With so much going on during Armory Week in Manhattan, you can be forgiven for not getting to the Charlotte Park survey on view at the Berry Campbell gallery in Chelsea, but it's really your loss.

Sure, the art fairs dotting the city as far north as the Park Avenue Armory and as far south as Tribeca had their moments. But just as the female artists of the past and present shined in those settings, Ms. Park's paintings from the years 1950 to 1985, work relatively unknown to the wider art market, demonstrate an artist at top form.

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News: ART REVIEW: Charlotte Park Paintings Shine Light on Major AB-EX Talent, February 29, 2016 - Charles A. Riley II for Hamptons Art Hub

ART REVIEW: Charlotte Park Paintings Shine Light on Major AB-EX Talent

February 29, 2016 - Charles A. Riley II for Hamptons Art Hub

Redemption can be jubilant, as the current resonant solo show devoted to Charlotte Park (1918-2010) at Berry Campbell gallery in Chelsea proves. After decades in the shadow of her husband, James Brooks, Park steps forward from the Abstract Expressionist chorus and unleashes her singular strong voice, hitting all the top notes of color, gesture and scale with confident power. 

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News: Overshadowed During her Lifetime, an Abstract Expressionist Gets her Due, February 29, 2016 - Bridget Gleeson for Artsy

Overshadowed During her Lifetime, an Abstract Expressionist Gets her Due

February 29, 2016 - Bridget Gleeson for Artsy

In the Hamptons of the 1950s and ’60s, there were two significant pairs of artists working in Abstract Expressionism. The two couples were also friends. One set you know: Jackson Pollock and Lee Krasner. The other you might not: James Brooks (1906–1992) and Charlotte Park (1918–2010).

Brooks and Park were both artists when they met in Washington, D.C., during World War II. They moved to New York together in 1945 and forged a fast friendship with Pollock and Krasner, renting studio space from them in the city and eventually following their lead to resettle on Long Island. “These artists were forging a new aesthetic,” Helen Harrison of the Pollock-Krasner House and Study Center has said, “and only they understood what they were doing, so there was this sense of camaraderie.”

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News: Museum Spotlights the Women of America’s First Cutting Edge Art Movement, February 18, 2016 - Ryan Steadman for The New York Observer

Museum Spotlights the Women of America’s First Cutting Edge Art Movement

February 18, 2016 - Ryan Steadman for The New York Observer

The exhibition, titled “Women of Abstract Expressionism”, has been organized by DAM’s curator of modern art Gwen Chanzit and consists of 51 paintings by 12 groundbreaking women artists who contributed to Abstract Expressionism; the large-scale, imageless painting style that firmly put New York City on the avant-garde art map in the 1940s and 50s. The artists in the exhibition include Mary Abbott, Jay DeFeo, Perle Fine, Helen Frankenthaler, Sonia Gechtoff, Judith Godwin, Grace Hartigan, Elaine de Kooning, Lee Krasner, Joan Mitchell, Deborah Remington and Ethel Schwabacher.

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