MoMA Presents Major Elizabeth Murray Retrospective
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MoMA Presents Major Elizabeth Murray Retrospective
Elizabeth Murray,Children Meeting. 1978. Oil on canvas. 8' 5" x 10' 7" (257.02 x 322.58 cm). Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Purchase with funds from the Louis and Bessie Adler Foundation Inc., Seymour M. Klein, President © 2005 Elizabeth Murray.



NEW YORK.-The Museum of Modern Art presents Elizabeth Murray, a major retrospective comprising more than 70 paintings and works on paper dating from 1963 to 2005 by New York-based artist Elizabeth Murray (American, b. 1940), in the broadest survey to date of her 42-year career. The exhibition showcases her complete body of work, focusing on her large-scale, multipaneled, shaped canvases, including her most recent work, The Sun and the Moon (2005). Organized in a loosely chronological fashion, the retrospective incorporates a selection of the artist's notebooks and drawings to further illuminate her prolific and consistently innovative career. On view from October 23, 2005, through January 9, 2006, in The Joan and Preston Robert Tisch Gallery on the sixth floor, Elizabeth Murray is organized by Robert Storr, who is the Rosalie Solow Professor of Modern Art at the Institute of Fine Arts of New York University, and was formerly Senior Curator in the Department of Painting and Sculpture at The Museum of Modern Art.

This retrospective indicates the Museum’s longstanding commitment to Elizabeth Murray’s art, which began in 1983 when two works entered the collection: the 1981 painting Painter’s Progress, and an untitled print from 1982. Painter’s Progress and four other works from the MoMA collection are included in the exhibition. In 1995, Murray was selected to curate an Artist’s Choice exhibition at MoMA titled Elizabeth Murray: Modern Women at the Museum of Modern Art.

Murray belongs to a generation of artists who emerged in the 1970s and whose exposure to Cubist-derived Minimalism and Surrealist-influenced Pop inspired experimentation with new modes of expression that would bridge the gap between these historical models. Over the course of more than four decades, she has transformed painting's conventions to forge an original artistic idiom through the use of vivid colors, boldly inventive forms, and shaped, constructed, multipaneled canvases. Murray's paintings are animated by recurring biomorphic shapes and vibrant images of domestic objects—cups, glasses, spoons, chairs, tables, and shoes—by which the artist subverts the viewer's notion of the familiar.

Murray grew up outside Chicago, and graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1962. She then moved to the West Coast to pursue a Master of Fine Arts degree at Mills College outside San Francisco. After Murray finished school and left California for New York, she lived in Buffalo for two years, before moving to New York City in 1967, where she lives and works today.

Murray's early works reflect her synthesis of images from periods of art history into compositions that also manifest her affinity for cartooning. In Night Empire (1967-68), Murray creates an iconic and decoratively framed Pop rendering of the Empire State Building. Demonstrating her interest in the modular aspects of Minimalism, which was the dominant style in New York during this period, Murray painted works such as Untitled (1970), based on Paul Cézanne's paintings of card players, and incorporated images and forms that recalled the Cubist works of Pablo Picasso and Juan Gris, such as Beer Glass at Noon (1971). Her longstanding interest in Cézanne also inspired Madame Cézanne in Rocking Chair (1972), a slapstick comic strip homage to the French master's many portraits of his wife. By spilling Mme Cézanne out of her chair, Murray created the first of many images in which the ideal of domesticity is upended. Murray soon began an investigation into geometric forms, using curved lines to give movement to small, detailed studies informed by mathematical ideas such as F Painting (1973) and Wave Painting (1973). Two paintings in the exhibition called Möbius Band (both 1974) are emblematic of her interest in Möbius strips—endless loops comprised of a band that is twisted 180 degrees and joined at two ends. Pink Spiral Leap (1975) marked a subsequent transformation of scale and form—at nearly six and a half feet square, the painting shows lines released from their mathematical confines to resemble a spring pressing out against the edges of the canvas.

Biomorphic imagery, and another dramatic increase in scale to approximately nine and a half feet square, characterize Beginner (1976), a painting whose primary image Murray has described as a "Tweety Bird shape." While Murray's childhood love of Walt Disney and the comics underpins many aspects of her art, the imagery in Beginner is attained through the manipulation of abstract elements, demonstrating the impact of both Picasso and Surrealists such as Salvador Dalí on her artistic development.

Tug and With (both 1978) are the first works in the exhibition to show Murray's incorporation of geometric and biomorphic forms onto angular, shaped frames. During the early 1980s, Murray embarked on a period of intense experimentation with structures formed by the abutment and overlap of multiple canvases. The flowering of her work at this time can be seen in Painter's Progress (1981) in which the fragments of Cubism and the arabesques of Surrealism are locked together in a virtuoso composition depicting a palette and brushes, the essential tools of a painter. With Yikes (1982), two separate canvases form a pair as their curved shapes almost line up to fit together, but a space is left between them. Similarly, Keyhole (1982) get its name from the blank space left by layered canvases built up around a hole in the center.

Murray's "emphatically unstill lifes," as Mr. Storr calls them, such as Fly By, Beam, and Long Arm (all from 1982), distort the perception of such common objects as wine glasses and tables by putting them in precarious situations. Liquids are splashed about as if the objects are being dropped or smashed, alluding to domestic chaos. Murray's splashes suggest physical trauma, human sexuality, and release of bodily fluids. In the painting More Than You Know (1983), a table is flattened, and another table is physically stretched and twisted in Don't Be Cruel (1985-86).










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