American Renaissance Art

  • NEW YORK CITY, New York
  • /
  • January 26, 2013

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James Dinerstein "Educated Guess", 2011, Concrete, 21" x 15" x 11"

January 26 through March 16, 2013.

James Dinerstein, Amaranth Ehrenhalt, Williamn Manning, Joe Overstreet, Nancy Steinson and Alison Weld.

The American Abstract Art movement was the epiphany of the individual. He was the center of the painting-of his universe. The art of the Abstract Expressionists is timeless, as has been proven by the auction world since the 50's. There are other styles and movements, but none that can compare.

James Dinerstein.   A New York native, Dinerstein graduated from Harvard. He studied with art   historian and critic Michael Fried. He worked at St. Martin's Art School in London with sculptors Anthony Caro and William Tucker. Dinerstein aims to   restore the resources of plasticity and mass while manifesting the spiritual   potency  of Greek antiquity and musical   polyphony. His recent work is more organic, primal, and overtly sensuous as   it emerges from a deeper and freer source. 

Amaranth Ehrenhalt. After 38 years   in France and Italy, Ehrenhalt returned New York in 2008. In N.Y. during the   50's she was friendly with Al Held, Ronald Bladen, and Willem de Kooning. She   has exhibited with Sam Francis, Joan Mitchell, Shirley Jaffe and others in   Paris. Ehrenhalt's work expands beyond the canvas to include drawings,   prints, watercolors, tapestries, mosaics, murals, sculptures, poetry, prose   and more. In order to experience the surprises and treasures of Ehrenhalt’s   art, it must be seen and digested by the viewer.

Amaranth Ehrenhalt "Douro", 1961, Oil on canvas, 52" x 38"

William Manning. Manning began   working in black and white before moving on to collage. His paper pieces are   the foundation of his work and are based on the environment of his native Maine. The subject for his delicate line drawing and expressive collage is   the cycling of nature, including the seasons, weather, and the sun’s light.   After 1975, he transitioned from flat to three-dimensional standing and wall   paintings that allowed for multiple viewpoints. His newer work of collage on panels uses his boldest, richest colors combined with an array of gestural   and geometric elements.   

Joe Overstreet. Born   in Conehatta, Mississippi, Overstreet's family migrated to San Francisco. He  attended the San Francisco Art institute under the mentorship of Sargent   Johnson. He moved to New York in 1958 and was incorporated into the New York   School as one of its younger members alongside Norman Lewis, Hale Woodruff,   and Romare Bearden. His work thematically challenges dimensional boundaries.   Overstreet experimented with steel mesh and wire, combining and unraveling   them with paint in a reference to the human condition. His new work is more sublime. 

Nancy Steinson. Born   in Louisville, Kentucky, Steinson came to New York and became an   abstractionist influenced by Constantin Brancusi, Barbara Hepworth, and Ben Nicholson. Liberating, purely geometric structures expressing movement,  direction, space and scale characterize her art. Her work is almost   exclusively, except in works on paper, formed with curved planar forms and linear straight edges which suggest a more organic approach to form as  opposed to the industrial purity of early minimalism. 

Alison Weld. Weld's paintings exude a passionate and visceral, yet clearly informed visual   intelligence. In each mark and gestural working of the paint, she manifests a personal presence calculated to engage the viewer in a process of discovery. Each of her paintings makes an individualized statement while referencing   others. The totality of artistic tension and resolution throughout her body of   work points to the complexities of the world we all live in.

Joe Overstreet, "Black Jacket", 1991, Oil on constructed canvas, 54" x 43"

The Anita Shapolsky Gallery presents the new exhibition, “American Renaissance Art” through March 16, 2013.

Anita Shapolsky Gallery and Art Foundation

 

Anita Shapolsky Gallery and Art Foundation
152 E 65th Street (patio entrance)
New York, New York

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