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News: UPCOMING EVENT | International Women's Day Talk: Artists Renate Aller, April Gornik, and Susan Vecsey , March  7, 2024

UPCOMING EVENT | International Women's Day Talk: Artists Renate Aller, April Gornik, and Susan Vecsey

March 7, 2024

INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY: WOMEN ARTISTS IN BEYOND THE HORIZON

Conversation with artists and Assistant Curator Brianna L. Hernández

PARRISH ART MUSEUM
March 8, 2024
6 pm

As the Parrish celebrates International Women’s Day, join us for a conversation with artists Renate Aller, April Gornik, and Susan Vecsey, each on view in Beyond the Horizon: Interpretations of the Landscape from Women in the Permanent Collection, moderated by Assistant Curator Brianna L. Hernández. The exhibition includes mural-sized representational oil paintings, expressionistic watercolors and pastel drawings, and intimate mixed-media abstractions, from the unique visual language of women artists from the Parrish’s permanent collection. In a conversation centered around the exhibition, visual styles experiences of the landscape, the program celebrates and recognizes the accomplishments of women artists within the Parrish collection and across the East End.

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$10 Members | $20 Adults | $18 Seniors | $15 Member’s Guest | Free for Students & Children

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News: PODCAST | Cerebral Women: A Conversation with Christine Berry, March  6, 2024 - Phyllis Hollis for Cerebral Women

PODCAST | Cerebral Women: A Conversation with Christine Berry

March 6, 2024 - Phyllis Hollis for Cerebral Women

LISTEN HERE: https://cerebralwomen.com/2024/03/06/episode-191-a-conversation-with-christine-berry/

Ep.191 | Christine Berry earned her Bachelors of Art in Art History from Baylor University and her Masters in Art History and Museum Studies from the University of North Texas. She began her career at the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth and continued on to the Whitney Museum of American Art. Twenty years ago, she shifted from the non-profit sector to the commercial art world.

In 2013, Christine Berry and Martha Campbell founded Berry Campbell Gallery in Chelsea. The gallery has a fine-tuned program representing artists from Postwar American art, who have been overlooked due to age, race, gender, or geography. This unique perspective has been increasingly recognized by curators, collectors, and the press.

Over the last ten years, Berry Campbell has doubled its roster, staff, and footprint. In 2022, the gallery moved from its original venue to its current 9,000 square foot gallery space at 524 West 26th Street. The gallery represents 34 artists and estates including Lynne Drexler, Perle Fine, Bernice Bing, Frederick Brown, Lilian Thomas Burwell, Nanette Carter, Beverly McIver, and Frank Wimberley.

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News: UPCOMING EXHIBITION | Americans in Paris at The Grey Art Museum (Mar 2-Jul 20), February 27, 2024

UPCOMING EXHIBITION | Americans in Paris at The Grey Art Museum (Mar 2-Jul 20)

February 27, 2024

Janice Biala (1903-2000) La Seine: Paris la Nuit, 1954, Oil on canvas, 18 x 36 3/8 in (48.3 x 92.4 cm) Collection of the Estate of Janice Biala, New York

AMERICANS IN PARIS:
Artist Working in Postwar France, 1946-1962

March 2-July 20, 2024

The Grey Art Gallery

New York University
100 Washington Square East
NYC

Following World War II, hundreds of artists from the United States flocked to the City of Light, which for centuries had been heralded as an artistic mecca and international cultural capital. Americans in Paris explores a vibrant community of expatriates who lived in France for a year or more during the period from 1946 to 1962. Many were ex-soldiers who took advantage of a newly enacted GI Bill, which covered tuition and living expenses; others, including women, financed their own sojourns.

Showcased here are some 130 paintings, sculptures, photographs, films, textiles, and works on paper by nearly 70 artists, providing a fresh perspective on a creative ferment too often overshadowed by the contemporaneous ascendency of the New York art scene. The show focuses on a diverse core of twenty-five artists—some who are established, even canonical, figures, and others who have yet to receive the recognition their work deserves. A complementary section dubbed the “Salon” combines works by French and foreign artists that the Americans would have seen in Parisian galleries or annual salons, alongside examples by compatriots who likewise spent at least a year residing in France during this time.

While the U.S. art scene was dominated by the rise of Abstract Expressionism, Americans working in Paris experimented with a range of formal strategies and various approaches to both abstraction and figuration. And, as the esteemed writer James Baldwin—a longtime French resident—saliently observed, living in Paris afforded expats the opportunity to question what it meant to be an American artist at midcentury. For some, Paris promised a society less constrained by racism and the exclusionary power structures of the New York art world.

American artists also encountered undercurrents of nationalistic tension, as French critics sought to maintain Paris’s artistic preeminence. By 1962, the year that concludes the exhibition, many felt that the once-inspiring atmosphere had diminished. That same year, Algeria achieved independence from France after many years of demonstrations and riots, and, ultimately, war. Many Americans opted to return to the U.S., which was experiencing a burgeoning civil rights movement, and in particular to New York, where there were more opportunities to exhibit, due in part to the rise of artist-run galleries. Others chose to remain abroad. Whether they returned or remained in Paris, the Americans’ encounters with French collections, artists, critics, and gallerists significantly impacted the development of postwar American art.

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News: NEWS | Eric Dever on View at US Embassy in Helsinki, February 21, 2024 - Staff Writer for 27east

NEWS | Eric Dever on View at US Embassy in Helsinki

February 21, 2024 - Staff Writer for 27east

As part of the U.S. State Department’s Art in Embassies program, paintings by East End artist Eric Dever are on view in the embassy residence of Ambassador Douglas Thomas Hickey in Helsinki, Finland. Curated by Camille Benton, the exhibition also includes work by Roy Lichtenstein, Gifford Beal, Jessica Snow, Mary Heebner and Pamela DeTuncq.

The Helsinki exhibition features Dever’s mural scaled, oil on canvas diptych, titled “October 10th” (2016), on loan through 2024. Dever’s self-identification with nature is echoed in his sampling of colorful morning glory blossoms which form the scaffolding of this painting. The blossoms were found within a 3.6 mile radius of Dever’s Water Mill studio garden and echo the distance and collection of pollen by bees whose hives are tended by beekeeper Francis Schiavoni. Dever’s oeuvre embraces both materiality, craftsmanship and a history of shared growth between the artist, his garden and painting.

These paintings are part of a larger body of work, paintings first exhibited by Berry Campbell, New York. Additional Dever paintings are part of notable public collections including the Parrish Art Museum, Grey Gallery/New York University Art Collection, Guild Hall Museum and the Heckscher Museum.

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News: ARTICLE | Berry Campbell featured in PATRON, February 14, 2024 - Terri Provencal for PATRON

ARTICLE | Berry Campbell featured in PATRON

February 14, 2024 - Terri Provencal for PATRON

"I always look forward to seeing the paintings brought by Berry Campbell, which represents the estates of historical female artists. I am inspired by Alice Baberwho organized exhibitions of women artists, Including Color Forum fo 1972 at the University of Texas in Austin." - Catalina Gonzalez Jorba (Collector and Founder of Dondolo)

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News: NEWS | Susan Vecsey Spring 2024 Artist-in-Residence at La Maison de Simon, February 14, 2024

NEWS | Susan Vecsey Spring 2024 Artist-in-Residence at La Maison de Simon

February 14, 2024

Susan Vecsey

2024 UPCOMING ARTIST-IN-RESIDENCE • PAINTER

Working between New York City and East Hampton, artist Susan Vecsey delicately weaves influences from Mark Rothko and Helen Frankenthaler. In her virtuoso manipulations of color, form, and space within poetic compositions, Susan Vecsey masterfully crafts an emotional experience.

In exploring nature’s abstract elements, Susan Vecsey’s paintings, a poetic fusion of geometric abstraction and minimalist landscapes, go beyond an intelligent reading of form. Her intentional play with perception allows each observer to project their own reflections onto the canvas where simplicity and abstraction coalesce.

During her residency at La Maison de Simon, the artist will work on a smaller series offering an intimate exploration of her work.

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News: ON VIEW | Beverley McIver at North Carolina Museum of Art, February 14, 2024

ON VIEW | Beverley McIver at North Carolina Museum of Art

February 14, 2024

Beverley McIver, Truly Grateful, 2011, oil on canvas, North Carolina Museum of Art, Gift in memory of Janet Martin Lampkin, former member of the executive committee of the Friends of African and African American Art

BEVERLY MCIVER (b. 1962)

A notable presence in American contemporary art, Beverly McIver has charted new directions as a Black female artist. With breathtaking honesty and virtuoso painting, her works tackle difficult themes about the human condition such as depression, racism, poverty, disability, and death. A recent article in Forbes compared her works both to “Frida Kahlo’s heart wrenching self-portraits,” and the “publicly exposed raw autobiography with the likes of Sylvia Plath poetry.” She has received numerous awards and honors and has been the subject of eleven museum exhibitions.

Born and raised in Greensboro, North Carolina, McIver grew up in a single-parent household. Her mother worked tirelessly to make ends meet to support McIver and two sisters, one of which, Renee, has developmental disabilities. Despite these challenges, McIver pursued her artistic inquiry through her education, earning a Bachelor of Arts degree in Painting and Drawing from North Carolina Central University and a Master of Fine Arts degree in Painting and Drawing from Pennsylvania State University. Her artistic journey serves as a testament to her perseverance and the complexities that shape her identity such as stereotyping, self-acceptance, family, otherness, illness, death and, ultimately, freedom to express one’s individuality.

See more works by Beverley McIver: https://www.berrycampbell.com/artist/Beverly_McIver/works/

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News: PODCAST | Artist Mike Solomon on Art and Childhood in 1960's and 70's East Hampton, February 13, 2024 - Our Hamptons Podcast

PODCAST | Artist Mike Solomon on Art and Childhood in 1960's and 70's East Hampton

February 13, 2024 - Our Hamptons Podcast

Esperanza and Irwin welcome artist Mike Solomon. Mike had an extraordinary childhood, growing up as the son of Syd and Annie Solomon. Syd was part of the Ab-Ex movement, and while he was a painter of great renown, the salons Annie hosted in her home were legendary. Mike, who is an important painter in his own right, shares the stories of what went on in the East Hampton in 1960's and 70's East Hampton.

LISTEN HERE: https://ourhamptonspodcast.com/

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