Hannah Wilke

Early Drawings
September 11-October 30, 2010

 

Art in America
The Jewish Daily Forward blog

The Brooklyn Rail
The New York Times
Huffington Post
PresS/Tletter


Artforum ad September 2010


Stanley Landesman, 1966
pastel, graphite, and photographs on paper
18 x 24 inches



The Forgotten Man, ca. 1970
pastel, pencil, and collage on paper
23 x 29 1/4 inches



Untitled, early 1960s
charcoal and ink on paper
31 x 23 1/8 inches



Untitled, early 1960s
charcoal and ink on paper
24 x 18 inches


Untitled, 2007
charcoal and ink on paper
23 x 35 inches


Equinox, ca. 1965
graphite and colored pencil on paper
18 x 24 inches


Untitled, early 1960s
black wash and white paint on paper
19 x 25 inches

For your love I would give the stars
above
, 1960s
pastel and graphite on paper
9 x 12 inches


Untitled, July 1965
pastel and graphite on Sparklepaque
17 x 11 inches


Untitled), 1964
pastel and graphite on paper
13 7/8 x 10 7/8 inches


Untitled, early 1960s
pastel and charcoal on paper
13 x 14 1/4 inches


Untitled, 1965
pastel and graphite on paper
12 3/8 x 14 3/8 inches

Untitled, 1960s
pastel and charcoal on paper
9 x 12 inches

Untitled, 1960s
pastel and graphite on gray card
4 1/2 x 6 5/8 inches

Crucifixion Complex, 1978
magic marker on paper
11 x 14 inches


Criminal Fingerprint Record, 1977
photographs and police fingerprint
record on paper
29 x 23 inches-

 

Click here for a PDF version of the following Press Release

                                                                         

 

 
HANNAH WILKE                                                    For Immediate Release: August 13, 2010      

EARLY DRAWINGS

September 11 - October 30

 

… throughout her [Wilke’s] graphic oeuvre, the issue of beauty is as central as it is in her photographic self-portraits.                                  Nancy Princenthal, Hannah Wilke, 2010

 

The Feldman Gallery will present more than fifty drawings from the ‘50s through the ‘70s by Hannah Wilke, few of which have ever been exhibited before.  Wilke, an early feminist whose photographic self-portraits and sculptures have become icons of contemporary art history, also made drawings throughout her career which are original in their own right.  The early drawings confirm Wilke’s talent as a draftsperson and colorist and foretell themes and practices that she would continue to explore until her death from lymphoma at the age of 52 in 1993. 

The earliest drawings in the exhibition include abstractions of vaginal and phallic forms from the late ‘50s and early ‘60s when Wilke was barely in her twenties.  Pastel drawings, playful and exuberant, depict a profusion of polymorphous shapes in Pop and muted colors on a variety of paper surfaces, including quality art paper, Artboard, perforated pads, and small cards.  Larger charcoal drawings, graphically sexual and, at the same time, elegantly formal, mirror her sculptural concerns to invent a new “female iconography” that began with box-like shapes and later evolved into the open, gestural forms of her latex, ceramic and gum sculptures. 

Wilke’s subsequent drawings become more decorous.  Stanley Landsman and This Was Once My Mother’s Plate, both from 1966, include delicate line drawings and refer to Wilke’s personal history, which informs her later photographic works.  Collages from the ‘60s and ‘70s combine vintage postcards of sentimental subjects with geometric lines and fields of soft color.  Self-Portrait as Angel for the Museum of Modern Art (1976) parallels Wilke’s performative self-portraits that enact the ways in which the female body is consumed culturally.  Crucifixion Complex (1978) combines word-play with doodles of her signature “gum” sculptures, and Criminal Fingerprint Record (1977) merges performance and real life.

The gallery will host a book-signing on September 29 (6:00 - 8:00PM) for the monograph Hannah Wilke by Nancy Princenthal, published by Prestel, which will be released in the United States in September.  Gestures, a catalogue accompanying Wilke’s one-person exhibition at the Neuberger Museum of Art, was recently published.
 
The Feldman Gallery has represented Hannah Wilke since 1972.  Future concurrent New York group exhibitions that will include her work are “The Talent Show” at PS 1 opening in late November and “The DeconstructiveImpulse: Women Artists Reconfigure the Signs of Power, 1973 – 1992,” at the Neuberger Museum of Art opening January 15, 2011.  Her work is currently on view at the Museum of Modern Art in “The Original Copy” through November 1 and is also included in “Contemporary Art from the Collection of TheMuseum of Modern Art” through September 12 and “Off The Wall” at the Whitney Museum through September 19.  Wilke is represented in many museum collections, including The Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, The Guggenheim Museum, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, the Centre Pompidou, Paris and the Verbund Collection, Vienna.

There will be a reception on Saturday, September 11 from 6:00 - 8:00PM.  Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10:00AM - 6:00PM.  Monday by appointment.  The gallery will be closed Saturday, September 18.  For more information, contact Sarah Paulson at (212) 226-3232 or sarah@feldmangallery.com

 

 

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