ONLINE: (Mostly) Women (Mostly) Abstract Pt. II
Eric Firestone Gallery is pleased to announce the second iteration of (Mostly) Women (Mostly) Abstract, a sweeping two-part exhibition across its East Hampton and New York City locations with a cross-generational group of artists. The exhibition focuses on abstraction and represents aesthetic conversations over time between contemporary artists and represented gallery artists and estates.
(Mostly) Women (Mostly) Abstract shows how content is embedded in abstraction. The work on view reflects multiculturalism, daily life, and domesticity, and employs references to sound, language, and place. The exhibition showcases artists who haven鈥檛 always operated in the center of the art world, but who charted a deeply personal path, and utilized experimental techniques, materials, and processes.
In broad terms, the exhibition considers the condition of 鈥渙therness鈥 as manifest in abstraction, in terms of ethnicity, race, gender, and sexual orientation. The exhibition reflects Eric Firestone Gallery鈥檚 central mission: to examine the ever-expanding canon of Post-War painting and sculpture in New York.
Eric Firestone Gallery is pleased to announce the second iteration of (Mostly) Women (Mostly) Abstract, a sweeping two-part exhibition across its East Hampton and New York City locations with a cross-generational group of artists. The exhibition focuses on abstraction and represents aesthetic conversations over time between contemporary artists and represented gallery artists and estates.
(Mostly) Women (Mostly) Abstract shows how content is embedded in abstraction. The work on view reflects multiculturalism, daily life, and domesticity, and employs references to sound, language, and place. The exhibition showcases artists who haven鈥檛 always operated in the center of the art world, but who charted a deeply personal path, and utilized experimental techniques, materials, and processes.
In broad terms, the exhibition considers the condition of 鈥渙therness鈥 as manifest in abstraction, in terms of ethnicity, race, gender, and sexual orientation. The exhibition reflects Eric Firestone Gallery鈥檚 central mission: to examine the ever-expanding canon of Post-War painting and sculpture in New York.
Artists on show
- Ben Pritchard
- Chris Martin
- Despina Stokou
- Helen Oji
- Helen O'Leary
- Hue Thi Hoffmaster
- Jeanne Reynal
- Jenny Snider
- Joseph Overstreet
- Judy Pfaff
- Keiko Narahashi
- Martha Edelheit
- Meg Lipke
- Nina Yankowitz
- Pat Passlof
- Patricia Lipsky
- Reginald Madison
- Richard Tinkler
- Sana Musasama
- Tamara Gonzales
- Ted Gahl
- Toni Ross
- Trudy Benson
- Uday K. Dhar
- Viola Frey