Legacy Solo Exhibitions

Joan Mitchell: Drawing into Painting

Untitled, 1992, abstract artwork on paper by artist Joan Mitchell
Joan Mitchell, Untitled, 1992. Pastel on paper, 29 1/2 x 21 3/4 inches (74.93 x 55.25 cm). © Estate of Joan Mitchell.
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Date

October 27 - December 23, 2016

Venue

Cheim & Read

Location

547 West 25th Street
New York, New York 10001
USA

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About This Exhibition

Press Release from Cheim & Read:
Cheim & Read is pleased to announce Joan Mitchell: Drawing into Painting, a survey of works on canvas and paper from 1958 through 1992, the year of the artist’s death. The exhibition, which will open on October 27, 2016, and run through December 31, will be accompanied by a catalogue featuring an essay by Mark Rosenthal.

For Mitchell, drawing and painting were related but autonomous activities. Her pastels can be as dense as oil paintings, and her oil paintings can be as light and airy as watercolors. The exhibition includes art from each decade of her career, with a formal range spanning flurried strokes and gestural lines of rhapsodic color, to darkly massed forms and complex, multi-panel formats. Featured among the large works in oil on canvas are the ravishing diptych “Heel, Sit, Stay” (1977) and the turbulent “La Grande Vallée XVI Pour Iva” (1983), painted in high contrasts of indigo, violet, lemon and lime.Mitchell’s move to France in 1959, as Rosenthal writes in his essay, “suggests an aesthetic choice whereby she submerged American artistic developments within a profound embrace of French Impressionism.” This decision represented a significant departure from the influences and goals of her colleagues in the New York School, and harked back to her student days at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she was “enthusiastically […] engaged with Modernist French art, from Édouard Manet to Henri Matisse.”The hedonistic color and vibrant light that characterizes Mitchell’s work, especially the paintings she made after settling in Vétheuil, a village on the Seine near Giverny, significantly expanded the formal vocabulary of Abstract Expressionism. As Rosenthal notes, Mitchell “evolved the New York School style by adding finesse to its gritty character and cultural awareness to its American outlook.”The sweep and complexity of Mitchell’s painterly language is built on an armature of drawing, whether it’s a feverish tangle of colored pencil lines or a series of loosely demarcated partitions dancing across a seven-panel pastel. Whatever its approach, each work in the exhibition embodies a unique consideration of color, gesture and structure, and a deeply felt understanding of the expressive potential of the graphic mark.

Joan Mitchell was born in 1925 in Chicago, and spent half her life in France, where she died in 1992. In 1951, her work was exhibited alongside that of Jackson Pollock, Willem de Kooning and Hans Hoffman in the celebrated “Ninth Street Show,” which marked the ascendancy of Abstract Expressionism within the development of modern art. Mitchell has since been the subject of numerous museum exhibitions, and examples of her work hang in nearly every major public collection of modern art, including the Art Institute of Chicago; Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris; the Guggenheim Museum; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, Australia; the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Osaka City Art Museum of Modern Art, Japan; the Samsung Museum, Seoul; the Tate Gallery, London and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York.

Mitchell’s work is also featured in several current and upcoming historical surveys: Woman of Abstract Expressionism at the Denver Art Museum through Sep 25, 2016; Abstract Expressionism, a touring exhibition at the Royal Academy of Arts, London, September 24, 2016 – January 2, 2017, and the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, February 3 – June 4, 2017; and Approaching American Abstraction at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, May 14, 2016-ongoing.