The Hard Line

THE HARD LINE

Seymour Boardman, Ilya Bolotowsky, Nassos Daphnis, Kendall Shaw

September 11 – November 15, 2014

 

the hard line card_front

The Anita Shapolsky Gallery is presenting an exhibit of four artists renowned for their contributions to hard-edged works in which color is primary.

The approach of Seymour Boardman (1921-2005) to visual structure evolved from his earlier works which evidenced a concern with expressive painted surfaces. After losing the use of his left hand during World War II, Boardman resumed his art studies in France from 1946-1949. “Visual structure” played a major role in his approach. Boardman moved from the use of gestural paint strokes to formally composed canvases that are specific in the use of color, shape placement, and line. In his acrylic 1961 Untitled (72” x 38”), Boardman places his shapes at the bottom of the rectangular canvas, interacting with both the space above and the actual bottom edge of the painting. He engages the spectrum of black by using two variations-each marked by different intensities and richness. Over a decade later, in the 1978 acrylic Untitled (26” x 34”) he uses only lines to explore the vastness of his white color field. Boardman’s work is included in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum, Newark Museum, Rose Art Museum, Guggenheim Museum, Whitney Museum and other more.

 

Seymour Boardman, "Untitled", 1964, Acrylic on Canvas, 72" x 38"

Seymour Boardman, “Untitled”, 1964, Acrylic on Canvas, 72″ x 38″

A founding member of the American Abstract Artists (1936), a group that rejected the popular realist imagery of the day, Ilya Bolotowsky (1907-1981) was one of the few artists to create an abstract mural for the WPA.  His biomorphic forms gave way to the grids, shaped canvases, and the use of primary colors interacting with white space – which operate as bands or lines. Bolotowsky was influenced by his countryman Kazimir Malevich, and when he first saw the paintings of Piet Mondrian in 1933, he was strongly impacted by the ideology of Neo-Plasticism. In the 1958 Naples Yellow and Grey (26” x 34 ½”), Bolotowsky delivers a nuanced work, without the use of primary colors. Instead, he punctuates gradations of white, greys, and the warmth of Naples Yellow with slender rectangles of aqua blue, dusty rose, and bluish purple – all of equal intensities. Bolotowksy’s work is included in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, San Francisco Museum of Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Hirshhorn Museum, the Guggenheim Museum – (where he had a retrospective in 1974) and other public institutions.

Ilya Bolotowsky, "Naples, Yellow & Grey", 1958, 34 1/2" x 24"

Ilya Bolotowsky, “Naples, Yellow & Grey”, 1958, Oil on Canvas,  34 1/2″ x 24″

The creative journey of Nassos Daphnis (1914- 2010) took him from early paintings recalling his youth in Greece, to the City Walls Project in the Manhattan of the 1970’s. His abstract, geometric images adorned building walls from the West Side Highway to Madison Avenue and 26th Street. Daphnis first showed at the Leo Castelli Gallery in 1959. His ouvre included the exploration of geometric planes of color, often arranged in patterns. He then morphed to a wide-ranging examination of circles, discs, rings, and spheres. The latter he explored in three-dimensional epoxy on novaply (a form of particle board). In PX-9-69 (30” x 30”) from 1969, Daphnis uses enamel on a circular plexiglass field to explore the push and pull of movement via both color and shape. The black and red motif uses missile-like forms to converge on a central black diamond. Simultaneously, bands of blue, yellow, and white both push towards the center while alluding to the space beyond the perimeters of the canvas. Daphnis is included in the collections of the Aldrich Museum, Museum of Modern Art, and Chrysler Museum and many others.

Nassos Daphnis, "PX-9-69", 1969, Enamel on Plexiglass, 30" x 30"

Nassos Daphnis, “PX-9-69″, 1969, Enamel on Plexiglass, 30″ x 30”

Emanating from an extensive background in science, specifically physics, Kendall Shaw (b.1924) has consistently been concerned with the metaphysics of art. Throughout his career, color and space have been primary. In his Cajun Minimalist series, Shaw uses panels of acrylic on canvas—placed to interact with the white wall space—to illustrate his philosophy of color as energy. In his 2012 Alligator Kum, Shaw employs four panels of color, two narrow and two wide. The narrow red and orange bands are separated by a span of white wall, equal in measure to them. The result is a shifting and ongoing dialogue. Shaw’s work is in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art in Japan, and the New Orleans Museum of Art.

Kendall Shaw, "Bayou Sauvage", 2013, 5 Panels - Acrylic on Canvas, 48" x 54"

Kendall Shaw, “Bayou Sauvage”, 2013, 5 Panels – Acrylic on Canvas, 48″ x 54″

All four artists reduced complicated image to its essence through a simple play with basic color planes.

For additional information and jpegs, please contact the gallery at: [email protected]

 

 

Ilya Bolotowsky, Untitled, 1970's, Silkscreen, 37 1/2" x 27 1/2"

Ilya Bolotowsky, Untitled, 1970’s, Silkscreen, 37 1/2″ x 27 1/2″

Seymour Boardman, Untitled, 1980, Acrylic on Canvas, 24" x 24"

Seymour Boardman, Untitled, 1980, Acrylic on Canvas, 24″ x 24″

Nassos Daphnis, 11-57, 1957, Oil on Canvas, 29" x 19"

Nassos Daphnis, 11-57, 1957, Oil on Canvas, 29″ x 19″

Kendall Shaw, Mermentau Pool, 2013, 4 Panels, Acrylic on Canvas, 48" x 42"

Kendall Shaw, Mermentau Pool, 2013, 4 Panels, Acrylic on Canvas, 48″ x 42″

Seymour Boardman, Untitled, 1976, Acrylic on Canvas, 28" x 36"

Seymour Boardman, Untitled, 1976, Acrylic on Canvas, 28″ x 36″

Ilya Bolotowsky, Plexi Multiple, 1975, Plexiglass, 30" x 7" x 7"

Ilya Bolotowsky, Plexi Multiple, 1975, Plexiglass, 30″ x 7″ x 7″

Karl Hagedorn: Symbolic Abstraction, May 8 thru Summer 2014

Karl Hagedorn_Postcard_Front

 

Press Release

The Anita Shapolsky Gallery will be presenting paintings by Karl Hagedorn (1922-2005) through the summer of 2014.

Hagedorn’s life and experiences were impacted by history and geography. Born in what had been the Weimar Republic, Hagedorn lived through Nazism, Communist rule in East Germany, relocation to the West German Republic-and then to the United States.

Hagedorn’s imagery was influenced by his childhood memories of the mechanical shapes and parts of his father’s sawmill, what he called “a kaleidoscope of geometric planes”. Durer, Pierro della Francesa, Leger, Miro, the Cubist and the Surrealists were artists he pointed to as impacting his vision.

An interweaving of his German and American identities informed his sensibilities, yielding a dynamic body of work.

Selected collections: Brooklyn Museum, Walker Art Center, New York Public Library, the Minneapolis Institute of Art, Philadelphia Museum of Art, Goethe Institute, Deutsches Museum and the Kunsthistorisches Museum.

Inversion on White, 2001, Oil on Canvas, 30" x 24"

Inversion on White, 2001, Oil on Canvas, 30″ x 24″

Uhrmacher, 2002 Oil on canvas, 24” x 30”

Uhrmacher, 2002
Oil on canvas, 24” x 30”

Ex Vortex 91, 1991 Oil on canvas, 48” x 46”

Ex Vortex 91, 1991
Oil on canvas, 48” x 46”

Ace, 1980 Oil on canvas, 42” x 30”

Ace, 1980
Oil on canvas, 42” x 30”

"Diskos", 1979, o/c, 40" x 36"

“Diskos”, 1979, o/c, 40″ x 36″

The Expressive Edge of Paper: February 22 – April 26, 2014

The expressive Edge of PaperKarel Appel, Mario Bencomo, Robert Blackburn, Seymour Boardman, Ilya Bolotowsky, Ernest Briggs, Lawrence Calcagno, Pérez Celis, Herman Cherry, Nassos Daphnis, Beauford Delaney, Michael Dominick, Amaranth Ehrenhalt, Claire Falkenstein, Agustín Fernández, Grace Hartigan, John Hultberg, Elaine Kurtz, Jack Larned, Joel Le Bow, William Manning, Clement Meadmore, Melissa Meyer, Henri Michaux, Jeanne Miles, Richards Ruben, Anne Ryan, William Saroyan, Kendall Shaw, Aaron Siskind, Nancy Steinson, Antoni Tàpies, and Petra Valentova.

The Anita Shapolsky Gallery is presenting a multi-faceted group of abstract paper works by twenty-seven artists we have exhibited over the years.  Paper experimentation shows the dichotomy between planning aspects in art and free form automatic drawing.  These works show great technical skill which bring the artists visions to life.  The works give incredible insight into their diverse approaches and the timelessness of their art.  The variety of pieces in this exhibit will be educational and exciting for viewers.  The molten iron paintings by Michael Dominick, for example, result in gestural strokes and splashes, which create beautiful and unpredictable marks that not only scorch the surface but also burn down into the depths of the layered paper.  The abstract photographs of Aaron Siskind evoke wonder at his ingenuity.  Antoni Tàpies’s prints are a good introduction to his ideas for earthly paintings.  Richards Ruben’s oil pastel paintings of Venetian walls on Kochi paper are ethereal.  Agustin Fernandez’s exquisite prints done in Paris by  Lacouriere et Frelaut evoke sensuality using mechanical parts (i.e. screws, pipes, etc.).

Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Ibiza), 1956, gouache and watercolor on paper, 17 7/8 x 11 13/16 in

Beauford Delaney, Untitled (Ibiza), 1956, gouache and watercolor on paper, 17 7/8 x 11 13/16 in

     Attachment Details     Mario Bencomo, Torquemada series, Inquisition - Hoods, 2001, acrylic on paper, 11x14 in

Mario Bencomo, Torquemada series, Inquisition – Hoods, 2001, acrylic on paper, 11×14 in

Grace Hartigan, Untitled, lithograph, 1988, 37 1/2 x 29 1/2 in

Grace Hartigan, Untitled, lithograph, 1988, 37 1/2 x 29 1/2 in

Claire Falkenstein, Mandala #1, 1980, sugar lift etching, 35 x 23 in

Claire Falkenstein, Mandala #1, 1980, sugar lift etching, 35 x 23 in

Anne Ryan, Moon is a Flower III, nd, 23 x 17 in

Anne Ryan, Moon is a Flower III, nd, 23 x 17 in

Ilya Bolotowsky, Untitled, nd, 37 1/2 x 27 1/2 in

Ilya Bolotowsky, Untitled, nd, 37 1/2 x 27 1/2 in

Nassos Daphnis, SS-2-78, 1978, acrylic on paper, 30 x 22 in

Nassos Daphnis, SS-2-78, 1978, acrylic on paper, 30 x 22 in

Lawrence Calcagno, Taos, 1982, mixed media, paper on canvas, 24 x 32 in

Lawrence Calcagno, Taos, 1982, mixed media, paper on canvas, 24 x 32 in

Perez Celis, Untitled (Buenos Aires), 1989, mixed media on paper, 27 x 36 in

Perez Celis, Untitled (Buenos Aires), 1989, mixed media on paper, 27 x 36 in

Michael Dominick, Ramapo No. 2, 2013, mixed media/collage on plaster backing paper, 34 x 22 x 1.5 in

Michael Dominick, Ramapo No. 2, 2013, mixed media/collage on plaster backing paper, 34 x 22 x 1 1/2 in

Henri Michaux, Untitled, 1973, acrylic on paper, 22 x 14 3/4 in

Henri Michaux, Untitled, 1973, acrylic on paper, 22 x 14 3/4 in

Richards Ruben, Pink a Boob, 1988, mixed media on kochi paper, 30 x 42 in

Richards Ruben, Pink a Boob, 1988, mixed media on kochi paper, 30 x 42 in

Aaron Siskind, Lima 89 (Homage to F.K), 1975, photograph, 24 x 20 in

Aaron Siskind, Lima 89 (Homage to F.K), 1975, photograph, 24 x 20 in

Petra Valentova, Clusters, 2012, watercolor/ink on paper, 34 x 32 in

Petra Valentova, Clusters, 2012, watercolor/ink on paper, 34 x 32 in

Robert Blackburn, The Wood, 1953, lithograph, 27 x 32 in

Robert Blackburn, The Wood, 1953, lithograph, 27 x 32 in

Nassos Daphnis, 23-D-78, print, 30 x 22 in

Nassos Daphnis, 23-D-78, print, 30 x 22 in

Amaranth Ehrenhalt, Rejoice 2, nd, print, 28 X 20 in

Amaranth Ehrenhalt, Rejoice 2, nd, print, 28 X 20 in

William Manning, Manana West 18, 2005, 24 x 24 in

William Manning, Manana West 18, 2005, collage/acrylic on masonite, 24 x 24 in

Clement Meadmore, Split Ring 2D, 1972, silkscreen, 33 x 29 in

Clement Meadmore, Split Ring 2D, 1972, silkscreen, 33 x 29 in

Jeanne Miles, Green Mandala, 1975, platinum, gold leaf, and oil on board, 20 x 20 in

Jeanne Miles, Green Mandala, 1975, platinum, gold leaf, and oil on board, 20 x 20 in

Antoni Tapies, Relief Varnish, 1981, embossed gold, 35 x 46 in

Antoni Tapies, Relief Varnish, 1981, embossed gold, 35 x 46 in

Karl Appel, Series of 10: Moving in Blue, 1978, lithograph, 21 x 29 in

Karl Appel, Series of 10: Moving in Blue, 1978, lithograph, 21 x 29 in