Ronnie Landfield – American Color Field Abstractionist
- PALM BEACH, Florida
- /
- March 06, 2021
Findlay Galleries is proud to announce the exhibition "Ronnie Landfield - American Color Field Abstractionist," opening on Saturday, March 13th, 2021, at Findlay Galleries, Palm Beach. The exhibition of works, which includes new paintings and select integral works, will also display paintings from his recent exhibit "Concurrence" at Findlay Galleries, New York.
Findlay Galleries' Chairman and CEO James Borynack commented, "After the success of Ronnie Landfields exhibition 'Concurrence' at our new gallery location at 32 East 57th Street, New York. Findlay Galleries is proud to now present these works at our flagship location in Palm Beach. Landfield's color field abstractions continue to develop with effortless sophistication, utilizing form, size, and color in a progressive yet retrospective way."
Ronnie Landfield has garnered much critical acclaim since he began his artistic career. In 2020, Art Forum's Ara Osterweil said, "Although nearly all of his images invoke the metaphysical, his approach nonetheless extends the vital dialogue between landscape and abstraction explored by mid-century pioneers such as Richard Diebenkorn, Helen Frankenthaler, and Joan Mitchell." In the same year, Dana Gordon wrote, "Ronnie Landfield, one of the greatest living painters, comes out of the Color Field milieu of New York in the 1960s and maintains its fervent artistic purity...[His work is] free from preconceived ideas of what and how to paint, he finds beauty in color and form, with love and generosity. Upholding the autonomous and emotive powers of painting, Landfield offers an experience both deep and uplifting."
The lyrical abstractions of Ronnie Landfield have become icons of the modernist Color Field movement. From a young age, growing up in New York City, Landfield would visit the avant-garde galleries of the time, taking in the Abstract Expressionists' work such as Jackson Pollock, Ad Reinhardt, and Willem de Kooning. Landfield studied at the Kansas City Art Institute, the San Francisco Art Institute, and The Art Students League in New York. In a reaction to the all-over, process-oriented abstraction of the mid-century, Landfield painted his abstractions from nature, incorporating the horizon as he used random effects of pouring and staining.
In 1967, at the age of 20, The Whitney Museum of American Art invited Landfield to exhibit and later included his work in their biennials of 1969 and 1973. In 1969, Landfield began showing with David Whitney Gallery in Soho. In the same year, architect Philip Johnson donated his important canvas "Diamond Lake" to the Museum of Modern Art.
Today, Landfield's work is in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and other important public institutions.
Contact:
Juan PretelFindlay Galleries
(561) 655-2090
juan@findlayart.com
165 Worth Avenue
Palm Beach, California
juan@findlayart.com
5616552090
Findlay Galleries
About Findlay Galleries
Celebrating 150 years in business, Findlay Galleries is an iconic family art business founded in 1870. Specializing in Impressionism, European Modernism, l'Ecole de Rouen, L'Ecole de Paris, and 20th Century American Art, the gallery represents over 100 artists and artist estates. Named Wally Findlay Galleries since 1965, the international company was acquired in 1998 by James R. Borynack. Associated with Findlay since 1972, Borynack was committed to the relentless pursuit of veritable European period works and international Contemporary artists. In 2016, Borynack also acquired the David Findlay Jr. Gallery and merged the two. Since then, the gallery has operated under its original name from 1870, Findlay Galleries Inc., and has continued to offer a significant collection of both period works and Contemporary art worldwide.