Skip to content

Cart

Your cart is empty

Article: The Week in Abstract Art - Person to Person

The Week in Abstract Art - Person to Person - Ideelart

The Week in Abstract Art - Person to Person

Some people say art is meaningless. Others insist it is the storehouse of all meaning. We find the debate moot. We are not interested in what one painting, or even all the paintings mean. We are just grateful for what art has done. What has art done, you ask? Art has showed us our best selves. Every artwork represents a moment when a human, or group of humans, suspended their animal nature long enough to create something. This is laudable, to say the least. François Pinault would no doubt agree. Pinault owns the art auction house Christies. He is currently self-funding the transformation of Paris’ Commodities Exchange building into a museum to house his personal art collection. This week he announced that he was speeding up the project in order to combat the recent violence plaguing the world, quoting the 20th Century French art theorist André Malraux, who asserted, “Art is the shortest path from man to man.” In that spirit, this week we would like to highlight four current or upcoming abstract art exhibitions showcasing art and artists that in some confront our connections to each other and to our higher selves.

Mark Bradford: Receive Calls on Your Cell Phone From Jail, Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis

On view through 21 August 2016

Urban detritus is often the medium of choice for Los Angeles-based artist Mark Bradford. For this exhibition, Bradford presents 38 paintings collaged from fragments of found posters explaining the difficulties prisoners have when trying to call someone on a cell phone, something which is difficult since many cell phone carriers restrict collect calls.

 

Alma Thomas, The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York

On view through 30 October 2016

Alma Thomas became the first black woman to have a solo show at the Whitney at age 80. That happened in 1972, only 12 years after Thomas had dedicated herself to full-time painting. Prior to that, Thomas spent 36 years teaching junior high school, helping connect with kids in ways that taught them to appreciate art. This comprehensive exhibition of Thomas’ paintings offers a chance to appreciate her immense, and often under-appreciated contribution to 20th Century abstract art.

 

Alma Thomas - Autumn Leaves Fluttering in the Breeze, 1973

 


Gabriel de la Mora: Sound Inscriptions on Fabric, The Drawing Center, New York

On view through 2 September 2016

For this exhibition, Gabriel de la Mora framed 55 pairs of found stereo speaker screens. Over years, or even decades, the screens adopted geometric patterns caused by the sound waves passing through them. This contemporary take on the readymade connects our eyes and ears, and our present with a strange and subtle reminder of the past.

 

Gabriel de la Mora - Fragil

 

John Blackburn: Material Nature, Osborne Samuel Gallery, London

On view from 8 September through 1 October 2016

In the 1960s, while still in his 30s, John Blackburn was on the verge of fame. But just as his art career was taking off, his 10-year old daughter became ill and needed of a kidney transplant. Blackburn put his practice on hold to donate his own kidney. The preparation, operation and subsequent recovery time ended his momentum. In 2006, at the age of 73, he had his first solo show since 1968. Since then, happily, interest in his work has steadily increased. This exhibition features Blackburn’s new works alongside many of the works he was making before he dropped from the scene in the 1960s.

 

John Blackburn - Three Forms Leaning Left, 2008

 

Featured Image: Mark Bradford - Artwork

Articles That You May Like

The Power of Blue: From Historical Masters to Contemporary Abstract Art - Ideelart
Andy Harwood

The Power of Blue: From Historical Masters to Contemporary Abstract Art

When you see the color blue, what do you feel? Would you describe it as something different than what you feel when you hear the word blue, or read the word blue on a page? Is the information comm...

Read more
When Art Leaves the Frame: The Nobility of the Artist's Object
Category:Art History

When Art Leaves the Frame: The Nobility of the Artist's Object

How rugs, folding screens, ceramics and tapestries by major artists became museum-grade collectibles, and what to know before bringing one home. In 1911, Sonia Delaunay stitched a patchwork blanke...

Read more
Op Art: The Perceptual Ambush and the Art That Refuses to Stand Still - Ideelart
Category:Art History

Op Art: The Perceptual Ambush and the Art That Refuses to Stand Still

To stand before a major Op Art canvas in the mid-1960s was not merely to look at a picture. It was to experience vision as an active, unstable, bodily process. When the Museum of Modern Art opened ...

Read more