Berry Campbell Gallery now opening 'Complexed Squares' featuring work by late-artist Yvonne Thomas
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Friday, November 22, 2024


Berry Campbell Gallery now opening 'Complexed Squares' featuring work by late-artist Yvonne Thomas
Yvonne Thomas, Complexed Squares 1964, acrylic on canvas, 45 1/8 x 91 3/8 inches. Photo courtesy of Berry Campbell.



NEW YORK, NY.- Berry Campbell is now opening Complexed Squares, its third exhibition with Yvonne Thomas (1913-2009). With seventeen paintings from 1963 to 1976, Complexed Squares highlights a decisive phase in the French-born painter’s career, as she moved beyond Abstract Expressionism to develop a distinctive personal style that resonated with artistic currents of the ‘60s.

A regular on New York’s art scene, Thomas was best known for her lyrical, gestural abstractions that followed the teachings of her professors and mentors, principally Robert Motherwell and Hans Hofmann.

In Complexed Squares, we see her exploring a new painterly vocabulary–using systems to determine her series of repeating geometric forms, switching from oil to acrylic, deploying her intensive hues to stage playful optical illusions.

When Berry Campbell exhibited the artist’s paintings from 1963-65 in 2019, New York Times co–chief art critic Roberta Smith described Thomas’s “modest but radiant proto-Minimalist” works as “perhaps the best in her career.”

The current show takes its title from Complexed Squares, the artist's 1964 painting that announces a new direction for Thomas. Traditionally an oil painter, she switched to acrylic.

Working on a horizontal canvas nearly four feet long, she painted criss-crossed swathes of translucent, vibrant color, creating varying tones and variations where they meet. It’s the signature geometric form of Hofmann, activated with the exuberant palette and illusionistic sensibility of Pop and Op art. The squares are “complexed,” Dr. Lisa Peters writes in the exhibition catalog, because the shapes are “implied, revealed, and the unintentional result of overlapped color.”

(In the ‘60s, when “square” generally meant uncool, the punning title might have suggested other meanings as well.)

In other paintings from 1964, Thomas draws from European art histories in her color experiments, evoking stained glass and the sumptuous effects of religious painting. In Transition, a shimmering golden ground is the backdrop for an ethereal gathering of squares that float and recede according to their hue and saturation. For Squares, Thomas chose a surface blend of cobalt and ultramarine blue–the one that Raphael used in his Madonnas to signify Heaven–achieving the effect with her new chosen medium, acrylic.

The exhibition continues with Thomas’s next series, a group of horizontal canvases that suggest arches, columns, windows and other architectural forms. In these mostly untitled works from 1969 to ’76, painted in a minimal palette, Thomas’s shapes use their kinetic energy to trick the eye, causing viewers to question their vision. “Forms that appear solid and three-dimensional suddenly seem to become windows,” Dr. Peters writes in her catalog essay. “Positive becomes negative space and vice versa. Some oblongs rise up before us as solid shapes—roadblocks or columns; others are portals in which the motion of the world is beyond our reach.”

Born in Nice, Thomas emigrated to the United States with her family in 1925, living in New England before settling in New York. She first studied painting at Cooper Union, dropping out in 1931 when the Depression threatened her parents’ livelihood, and putting art on hold to become a successful fashion illustrator.

In 1936, she resumed her artistic education. She studied at the Art Students League with Vaclav Vytlacil, a student of Hofmann, and then at the Ozenfant School of Fine Art, founded by the French Cubist Amédée Ozenfant. In 1948, she met her most influential teachers. Her friend Patricia Matta introduced her to the Subjects of the Artist School, where many of the best-known Abstract Expressionist painters were based. Thomas enrolled as a student during the one year of the school’s operation, from 1948–49. When Motherwell took over, she continued to work with him closely as she developed her own style. Then, starting in 1950, she studied with Hofmann at his Provincetown school and later in New York. He helped her nurture her lifelong explorations of color.

By then, Thomas was a well-known figure in the downtown art community. Thomas lived with her husband, Leonard, in Greenwich Village with their two daughters. They entertained often with friends including Duchamp (another French transplant), Elaine de Kooning, Ad Reinhardt, Fay Lansner, and many others. Thomas joined “the Club,” the legendary gathering of Abstract Expressionists initiated in 1948. She participated in 5 Stable Gallery annual exhibitions from 1953 through 1956.

Thomas was soon exhibiting regularly. In April 1960, she had a solo show at Esther Stuttman’s New York gallery. Donald Judd was one admirer, praising Thomas’s joyous lyricism in his Arts magazine review. “The paint and the canvas are identified with one another, continued into each other, and the consequent speed and thinness of the surface engender the clarity and singleness of the poetry,” he wrote.

The Complexed Squares attracted critical attention as well, as Thomas debuted her new abstractions in a solo 1964 show at the Newport Art Museum in and in two 1965 exhibitions at Rose Fried Gallery in New York. Writing in ARTnews, a critic praised Thomas’s “impressive recent abstractions in which several squares of roughly equal size are lined up, shifted and maneuvered into position by means of color. . . ..These may be ideologically related to Hofmann, but they are sufficiently different from his absolute squares of color to achieve uniqueness.”

In recent years, Thomas’s earlier work has been part of the surge of interest in women Abstract Expressionist painters. In 2016, her paintings Cyclops (1955) and Transmutation (1956) were included in the Denver Art Museum’s groundbreaking exhibition Women of Abstract Expressionism.

Three of Thomas’ paintings are featured in the traveling exhibition Action, Gesture, Paint that opened at London’s Whitechapel Gallery and is now on view at Fondation Vincent van Gogh, Arles, France and in 2021, the National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C., acquired Thomas’s Portrait (1956).

Complexed Squares features just one chapter in a long career of artistic reinvention by Thomas. In 1993, when the Aspen Art Museum surveyed the career to date of the artist, who spent many years in the area, critic John Yau celebrated her defiant rejection of boundaries and categories. Her ability to draw on O’Keeffe’s modernism, Abstract Expressionism, and Minimalism “forces us to rethink definitions of each style,” he writes.

What’s consistent is the impact her art has on the viewer, Yau adds. “Thomas uses abstraction to challenge our need to recognize both what we see in art and the way we look at the world.”

Berry Campbell
Yvonne Thomas: Complexed Squares
September 8th, 2023 - October 14th, 2023










Today's News

September 8, 2023

Helicline Fine Art opens 'A Rendezvous with Destiny 1930s American Art'

The artistry of her baskets is complex. So is the story around them.

Bonhams announces highlights of September Asia Week New York sales

Christie's to present '100 Years of Creativity: A Century of Bookmaking at Phaidon' for it's centennial anniversary

The mystery behind 'A Wrinkle in Time' cover art is solved

Queen lyrics and Freddie Mercury's grand piano soar at auction

'Sanford Biggers: Meet Me on the Equinox' opens at Marianne Boesky Gallery

Eamon Ore-Giron's work to be featured in exhibition at James Cohan Gallery

Miller & Miller to hold a petroliana, advertising & music machines auction September 16th

Philanthropies pledge $500 million to address crisis in local news

Third solo exhibition by artist Hoda Kashiha at Galerie Nathalie Obadia, 'Another world is waiting for us'

'Leslie Smith III: Reaching for Something High' solo exhibition opening at CHART

125 Newbury announces 'Peter Hujar: Echoes' opening today

Confessions of a drag legend: Charles Busch's memoir is here, darling

Hammer Museum appoints Naoko Takahatake and Paulina Pobocha to key curatorial positions

Jack Hanley Project Space opens an exhibition of works by Sofia Sinibaldi

Duo exhibition by Daniel Núñez and Jason Pulgarin addresses artist struggles through paintings and sculptures

Mumbai gets its first ever art fair: Art Mumbai will take place at the Mahalaxmi Race Course in November

Chapter NY presents Willa Nasatir & Stella Zhong starting today

Berry Campbell Gallery now opening 'Complexed Squares' featuring work by late-artist Yvonne Thomas

Angela Heisch's 'As above, so below' now on view at GRIMM, NY

Terence Blanchard, pushing jazz forward from a new perch

Gary Wright, who had a '70s hit with 'Dream Weaver,' dies at 80

Jessica Lange leads starry cast of new Paula Vogel play on Broadway

Why Lack of Sleep is Detrimental to Your Overall Health

GB WhatsApp vs. WhatsApp: Which One Should You Choose?

Art Meets Athletics: How an Ordinary Baseball Bat Became a Stunning Canvas

What to Look for When Buying a Sword Online?

What is Chat GPT and its Characteristics:

Update GB WhatsApp Apk Mod

How to get more subscribers on YouTube?

How to get YouTube subscribers?

How to Buy Views on YouTube?

How to get Views on YouTube?

25 Tips To Enhance Your Mood With Music: Let Your Inner Groove Boost Your Mental Health and Happiness

Unlocking the Power of Micro-Influencer Marketing: Strategies for Niche Industry Success




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys
Holistic Dentist
Abogado de accidentes
สล็อต
สล็อตเว็บตรง

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful