Agnes Bernice Martin (March 22, 1912 – December 16, 2004), was an American abstract painter. Her work has been defined as an "essay in discretion on inward-ness and silence".
Although she is often considered or referred to as a
minimalist, Martin considered herself an
abstract expressionist and was one of the leading practitioners of Abstract Expressionism in the 20th century.
She was awarded a
National Medal of Arts
The National Medal of Arts is an award and title created by the United States Congress in 1984, for the purpose of honoring artists and Patronage, patrons of the arts. A prestigious American honor, it is the highest honor given to artists and ar ...
from the
National Endowment for the Arts in 1998.
She was elected to the
Royal Canadian Academy of Arts in 2004.
Personal life
Agnes Bernice Martin was born in 1912 to Scottish Presbyterian farmers in
Macklin, Saskatchewan, one of four children.
[MoMA , The Collection , Agnes Martin. (American, born Canada. 1912–2004)](_blank)
''Moma.org''. Accessed March 28, 2011. From 1919, she grew up in
Vancouver.
She moved to the
United States in 1931 to help her pregnant sister, Mirabell, in Bellingham, Washington.
She preferred American higher education and became an American citizen in 1950.
[Collection Online , Agnes Martin]
, ''Guggenheimcollection.org''. Accessed March 28, 2011. Martin studied at
Western Washington University College of Education,
Bellingham, Washington, prior to receiving her B.A. (1942) from
Teachers College, Columbia University.
It was while living in New York that Martin became interested in modern art and was exposed to artists such as Arshile Gorky (1904–1948), Adolph Gottlieb (1903–1974), and Joan Miró (1893–1983).
She took a multitude of studio classes at Teachers College and began to seriously consider a career as an artist.
In 1947 she attended the Summer Field School of the University of New Mexico in
Taos, New Mexico.
After hearing lectures by the Zen Buddhist scholar
D. T. Suzuki at Columbia, she became interested in Asian thought, not as a religious discipline, but as a code of ethics, a practical how-to for getting through life.
A few years following graduation, Martin matriculated at the
University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, where she also taught art courses before returning to Columbia University to earn her M.A. (1952) in modern art. She moved to New York City in 1957 and lived in a loft in
Coenties Slip in lower Manhattan.
The Coenties Slip was also home to several other artists and their studios.
There was a strong sense of community although each had their own practices and artistic temperaments. The Coenties Slip was also a haven for the queer community in the 1960s. It is speculated that Martin was romantically involved with the artist
Lenore Tawney (1907–2007) during this time.
A pioneer of her time, Agnes Martin never publicly expressed her sexuality, but has been described as a "closeted homosexual." The 2018 biography ''Agnes Martin: Pioneer, Painter, Icon'' describes several romantic relationships between Martin and other women, including the dealer
Betty Parsons.
She often employed a feminist lens when she critiqued fellow artists' work.
Jaleh Mansoor, an art historian, stated that Martin was "too engaged in a feminist relation to practice, perhaps, to objectify and label it as such." It is worth noting that Martin herself did not identify as a feminist and even once told a ''New Yorker'' journalist in an interview that she thought "the women's movement had failed."
Martin was publicly known to have
schizophrenia,
although it was undocumented until 1962.
She even once opted for
electric shock therapy
Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is a psychiatric treatment where a generalized seizure (without muscular convulsions) is electrically induced to manage refractory mental disorders.Rudorfer, MV, Henry, ME, Sackeim, HA (2003)"Electroconvulsive th ...
for treatment at
Bellevue Hospital in New York.
Martin did have the support of her friends from the Coenties Slip, who came together after one of her episodes to enlist the help of a respected psychiatrist, who as an art collector was a friend to the community. However, her struggle was a largely private and individual one, and the full effect of the mental illness on her life is unknown.
Martin left New York City abruptly in 1967, disappearing from the art world to live alone.
After eighteen months on the road camping across both Canada and the western United States, Martin settled in Mesa Portales, near
Cuba, New Mexico (1968-1977).
She rented a 50-acre property and lived a simple life in an adobe home that she built for herself, adding four other buildings over the years.
During these years she did not paint, until 1971, when she was approached by curator
Douglas Crimp who was interested in organizing her first solo non-commercial exhibition. Subsequently, Martin started to write and lecture at various universities about her work.
Slowly Martin's interest in painting renewed as well. She approached
Pace Gallery about her work and the gallery's founder
Arne Glimcher (b.1938) became her lifelong dealer.
Finally able to own her own property, she moved to
Galisteo, New Mexico, where she lived until 1993.
She built an adobe home there too, still choosing an austere lifestyle. Although she still preferred solitude and she lived alone, Martin was more active in the art world, travelling extensively and showing in Canada, the United States, and internationally.
In 1993 she moved to a retirement residence in
Taos, New Mexico, where she lived until her death in 2004.
Many of her paintings bear positive names such as ''Happy Holiday'' (1999) and ''I Love the Whole World'' (2000).
In an interview in 1989, discussing her life and her painting, Agnes Martin said, "Beauty and perfection are the same. They never occur without happiness."
Career
Her work is most closely associated with Taos,
with some of her early work visibly inspired by the desert environment of New Mexico.
However, there is also a strong influence from her young upbringing in rural Canada, particularly the vast and quiet Saskatchewan prairies.
While she described herself as an American painter, she never forgot her Canadian roots, returning thereafter she left New York in 1967, as well as during her extensive travels in the 1970s.
Some of Martin's early works have been described as simplified farmer's fields, and Martin herself left her work open to interpretation encouraging comparisons of her unembellished, monochromatic canvases to landscapes.
She moved to New York City at the invitation of the artist/gallery owner Betty Parsons in 1957 (the women had met prior to 1954). That year, she settled in
Coenties Slip in lower Manhattan, where her friends and neighbors, several of whom were also affiliated with Parsons, included
Robert Indiana
Robert Indiana (born Robert Clark; September 13, 1928 – May 19, 2018) was an American artist associated with the pop art movement.
His iconic image LOVE was first created in 1964 in the form of a card which he sent to several friends and acq ...
,
Ellsworth Kelly,
Jack Youngerman, and
Lenore Tawney.
Barnett Newman
Barnett Newman (January 29, 1905 – July 4, 1970) was an American artist. He has been critically regarded as one of the major figures of abstract expressionism, and one of the foremost color field painters. His paintings explore the sense o ...
actively promoted Martin's work, and helped install Martin's exhibitions at Betty Parsons Gallery beginning in the late 1950s.
Another close friend and mentor was
Ad Reinhardt.
In 1961 Martin contributed a brief introduction to a brochure for her friend Lenore Tawney's first
solo exhibition
A solo show or solo exhibition is an exhibition of the work of only one artist. The artwork may be paintings, drawings, etchings, collage, sculpture, or photography. The creator of any artistic technique may be the subject of a solo show. Other s ...
, the only occasion on which she wrote on the work of a fellow artist. In 1967, Martin famously abandoned her life in New York. Cited reasons include the death of her friend Ad Reinhardt, the demolition of many buildings on Coenties Slip, and a breakup with the artist
Chryssa whom Martin had dated off and on throughout the 1960s.
In her ten years living in New York Martin was frequently hospitalized to control symptoms of schizophrenia which manifested in the artist in a number of ways, including aural hallucinations and states of catatonia: on a number of occasions she received electroconvulsive therapy at Manhattan's
Bellevue Hospital.
After Martin left New York, she drove about the western US and Canada, deciding to settle in
Cuba, New Mexico, for a few years (1968-1977), then settled in
Galisteo, New Mexico, (1977-1993).
In both New Mexico homes, she built adobe brick structures herself.
She did not return to art until 1973 and consciously distanced herself from the social life and social events that brought other artists into the public eye.
She collaborated with architect Bill Katz in 1974 on a log cabin she would use as her studio. That same year, she completed a group of new paintings and from 1975 they were exhibited regularly.
In 1976 she made her first film, ''
Gabriel'', a 78-minute landscape film which features a little boy going for a walk. A second movie, ''Captivity'', was never completed after the artist threw the rough cut into the town dump.
According to a filmed interview with her that was released in 2003, she had moved from New York City only when she was told her rented loft/workspace/studio would be no longer available because of the building's imminent demolition. She went on further to state that she could not conceive of working in any other space in New York. When she died at age 92, she was said not to have read a newspaper for the last 50 years. Essays in the book dedicated to the exhibition of her work in New York at The
Drawing Center
The Drawing Center is a Manhattan, New York, museum and a nonprofit exhibition space that focuses on the exhibition of drawings, both historical and contemporary.
History
The Drawing Center was founded by former assistant curator of drawings at ...
(traveling to other museums as well) in 2005 – ''3x abstraction'' – analyzed the spiritual dimension in Martin's work. The 2018 biography ''Agnes Martin: Pioneer, Painter, Icon'' was the first book to explore Martin's relationship with women and her early life in substantial detail and was written in collaboration with Martin's family and friends.
Artistic style
In addition to a couple of self-portraits and a few watercolor landscapes, Martin's early works included biomorphic paintings in subdued colors made when the artist had a grant to work in Taos between 1955 and 1957. However, she did her best to seek out and destroy paintings from the years when she was taking her first steps into abstraction.
Martin praised
Mark Rothko for having "reached zero so that nothing could stand in the way of truth". Following his example Martin also pared down to the most reductive elements to encourage a perception of perfection and to emphasize transcendent reality. Her signature style was defined by an emphasis upon line, grids, and fields of extremely subtle color. Particularly in her breakthrough years of the early 1960s, she created 6 × 6 foot square canvases that were covered in dense, minute and softly delineated graphite grids.
In the 1966 exhibition ''Systemic Painting'' at the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, often referred to as The Guggenheim, is an art museum at 1071 Fifth Avenue on the corner of East 89th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is the permanent home of a continuously exp ...
, Martin's grids were therefore celebrated as examples of
Minimalist art and were hung among works by artists including
Sol LeWitt,
Robert Ryman, and
Donald Judd.
While minimalist in form, however, these paintings were quite different in spirit from those of her other minimalist counterparts, retaining small flaws and unmistakable traces of the artist's hand; she shied away from
intellectualism, favoring the personal and spiritual. Her paintings, statements, and influential writings often reflected an interest in Eastern philosophy, especially
Taoist. Because of her work's added spiritual dimension, which became more and more dominant after 1967, she preferred to be classified as an
abstract expressionist.
Martin worked in only black, white, and brown before moving to New Mexico. The last painting before she abandoned her career, and left New York in 1967, ''Trumpet'', marked a departure in that the single rectangle evolved into an overall grid of rectangles. In this painting the rectangles were drawn in pencil over uneven washes of gray translucent paint. In 1973, she returned to art making, and produced a portfolio of 30 serigraphs, ''On a Clear Day''. During her time in Taos, she introduced light pastel washes to her grids, colors that shimmered in the changing light. Later, Martin reduced the scale of her signature 72 × 72 square paintings to 60 × 60 inches
and shifted her work to use bands of ethereal color. Another departure was a modification, if not a refinement, of the grid structure, which Martin has used since the late 1950s. In ''Untitled No. 4'' (1994), for example, one viewed the gentle striations of pencil line and primary color washes of diluted acrylic paint blended with gesso. The lines, which encompassed this painting, were not measured by a ruler, but rather intuitively marked by the artist.
In the 1990s, symmetry would often give way to varying widths of horizontal bands.
Lawrence Alloway noted that Martin is in the first generation of the Abstract Expressionism style, which is significant and "shows her commitment to exalted subject matter" and her ability to "transform it into the language of painting which gives the works their aura of silent dignity."
Exhibitions
Since her first solo exhibition in 1958, Martin's work has been the subject of more than 85 solo shows and two retrospectives including the survey, ''Agnes Martin'', organized by the
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, which later traveled to Jamaica (1992–94) and ''Agnes Martin: Paintings and Drawings 1974–1990'' organized by the
Stedelijk Museum
The Stedelijk Museum Amsterdam (; Municipal Museum Amsterdam), colloquially known as the Stedelijk, is a museum for modern art, contemporary art, and design located in Amsterdam, Netherlands. , Amsterdam, with subsequent venues in France and Germany (1991–92). In 1998, the
Museum of Fine Arts in Santa Fe, New Mexico mounted Agnes Martin Works on Paper. In 2002, the
Menil Collection, Houston, mounted ''Agnes Martin: The Nineties and Beyond''. That same year, the
Harwood Museum of Art at the
University of New Mexico, Pandora, organized ''Agnes Martin: Paintings from 2001'', as well as a symposium honoring Martin on the occasion of her 90th birthday.
In addition to participating in an international array of group exhibitions such as the
Venice Biennale (1997, 1980, 1976), the
Whitney Biennial (1995, 1977), and
Documenta
''documenta'' is an exhibition of contemporary art which takes place every five years in Kassel, Germany.
The ''documenta'' was founded by artist, teacher and curator Arnold Bode in 1955 as part of the Bundesgartenschau (Federal Horticultura ...
, Kassel, Germany (1972), Martin has been the recipient of multiple honors including the Lifetime Achievement Award on behalf of the Women's Caucus for Art of the
College Art Association (2005); Fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences (1992);
the Governor's Award for Excellence and Achievement in the Arts given by Governor
Gary Johnson, Santa Fe, New Mexico (1998); the
National Medal of Arts
The National Medal of Arts is an award and title created by the United States Congress in 1984, for the purpose of honoring artists and Patronage, patrons of the arts. A prestigious American honor, it is the highest honor given to artists and ar ...
awarded by President
Bill Clinton and the
National Endowment for the Arts (1998); the Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement by the
College Art Association (1998); the
Golden Lion
The Golden Lion ( it, Leone d'oro) is the highest prize given to a film at the Venice Film Festival. The prize was introduced in 1949 by the organizing committee and is now regarded as one of the film industry's most prestigious and distinguishe ...
for Contribution to Contemporary Art at the
Venice Biennale (1997); the Oskar Kokoschka Prize awarded by the Austrian government (1992); the Alexej von Jawlensky Prize awarded by the city of Wiesbaden, Germany (1991); and election to the
American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, New York (1989).
Exhibitions continue to be mounted since her death in 2004, including Agnes Martin: Closing the Circle, Early and Late Feb 10, 2006 – Mar 04, 2006 at Pace Gallery.
Other exhibitions have been held in New York, Zurich, London, Dublin, Edinburgh, Cambridge (England), Aspen, Albuquerque, British Columbia in Canada. In 2012, The Harwood Museum of Art in Taos, New Mexico, University of New Mexico launched a museum wide exhibition titled, ''Agnes Martin Before the Grid'' in honor of her centennial year. This exhibit was the first to focus on the work and life of Martin prior to 1960. The exhibit focused on many, never seen before, works Martin created at Columbia, Coentis Slip and early years in new Mexico. It was also the first to consider Martins struggle with mental health, sexuality and Martin's important relationship with Ad Ad Reinhardt. In 2015,
Tate Modern ran a retrospective of her life and career from the 1950s until her last work in 2004, which will travel to other museums after the show in London.
At the
University of Michigan Museum of Art, Martin was featured in the exhibition ''Reductive Minimalism: Women Artists in Dialogue, 1960-2014'' which examined the two generations of
Minimalist art side by side, from October 2014 through January 2015.
The exhibition included
Anne Truitt
Anne Truitt (March 16, 1921December 23, 2004), born Anne Dean, was an American sculptor of the mid-20th century.
She became well known in the late 1960s for her large-scale minimalist sculptures, especially after influential solo shows at André ...
,
Mary Corse, and contemporary artists
Shirazeh Houshiary
Shirazeh Houshiary (born 15 January 1955) is an Iranian-born English sculptor, installation artist, and painter. She lives and works in London.
Life and work
Shirazeh Houshiary was born on 15 January 1955 in Shiraz, Iran. She left her native c ...
and
Tomma Abts.
She was also featured in ''White on the White: Color, Scene, and Space'' in
Hiroshima City Museum of Contemporary Art. From October 2015 through April 2016, Martin was exhibited in ''Opening the Box: Unpacking Minimalism'' at The George Economou Collection in Athens, Greece alongside
Dan Flavin and
Donald Judd. From 2015 to 2017 she had numerous solo exhibitions, some being at the
Aspen Art Museum
Founded in 1979, the Aspen Art Museum (AAM) is a non-collecting contemporary art museum located in Aspen, Colorado. AAM exhibitions include drawings, paintings, sculptures, multimedia installations and electronic media.
Aspen Art Museum Building ...
in Aspen Colorado,
Tate Modern in London,
K20,
Kunstsammlung Nordhein-Westfalen in Düsseldorf,
Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) in Los Angeles,
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, often referred to as The Guggenheim, is an art museum at 1071 Fifth Avenue on the corner of East 89th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is the permanent home of a continuously exp ...
in the Upper East Side, at the
Palace of Governors, The New Mexico Museum of History in Santa Fe. She has featured in the ongoing exhibition Intuitive Progression at the Fisher Landau Center for Art in Long Island City, New York from February 2017 to August 2017.
In 2016, a retrospective exhibition of her works from the 1950s through 2004 was presented at the
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, often referred to as The Guggenheim, is an art museum at 1071 Fifth Avenue on the corner of East 89th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is the permanent home of a continuously exp ...
in New York. In 2016 she was also featured in the ''Dansaekhwa and Minimalism Exhibition'' at Blum & Poe, Los Angeles and earlier in the year in the show titled ''Aspects of Minimalism: Selections from East End Collections'' at the Guild Hall Museum in East Hampton, New York.
She was also featured in ''Making Space: Women Artists and Postwar Abstraction'' at
The Museum of Modern Art in Midtown, New York which shined a light on women artists who worked post
World War II and before the start of the
Feminist movement. The exhibition went from April 2017 to August 2017 and featured
Lee Krasner,
Helen Frankenthaler, and
Joan Mitchell,
Lygia Clark,
Gego,
Magdalena Abakanowicz,
Louise Bourgeois, and
Eva Hesse.
Collections
Martin's work can be found in major public collections in the United States, including the
New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe, NM;
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY; The
Chinati Foundation, Marfa, TX;
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.;
Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art;
The Menil Collection
The Menil Collection, located in Houston, Texas, refers either to a museum that houses the art collection of founders John de Menil and Dominique de Menil, or to the collection itself of approximately 17,000 paintings, sculptures, prints, drawing ...
, Houston, TX;
Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York;
The Museum of Modern Art, New York;
National Gallery of Art
The National Gallery of Art, and its attached Sculpture Garden, is a national art museum in Washington, D.C., United States, located on the National Mall, between 3rd and 9th Streets, at Constitution Avenue NW. Open to the public and free of char ...
, Washington, D.C.;
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City;
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art;
Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, often referred to as The Guggenheim, is an art museum at 1071 Fifth Avenue on the corner of East 89th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is the permanent home of a continuously exp ...
, New York;
Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford;
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis;
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and
Des Moines Art Center, Des Moines, IA, among others. Her work is on "long-term view" and part of the permanent holdings of
Dia Art Foundation, Beacon, New York.
International holdings of Martin's work include the
Tate, London and Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall, Stockholm, Sweden.
Art market
In 2007, Martin's ''Loving Love'' (2000) was sold for $2.95 million at
Christie's
Christie's is a British auction house founded in 1766 by James Christie (auctioneer), James Christie. Its main premises are on King Street, St James's in London, at Rockefeller Center in New York City and at Alexandra House in Hong Kong. It is ...
, New York.
In 2015, ''Untitled #7'' (1984), a white acrylic painting with geometric pencil lines, sold for $4.2 million at
Phillips
Phillips may refer to:
Businesses Energy
* Chevron Phillips Chemical, American petrochemical firm jointly owned by Chevron Corporation and Phillips 66.
* ConocoPhillips, American energy company
* Phillips 66, American energy company
* Phil ...
in New York. In 2016, her ''Orange Grove'' sold at auction for $13.7 million, the same year as the Guggenheim held a retrospective of her work.
Legacy
Martin became an inspiration to younger artists, from
Eva Hesse to
Ellen Gallagher.
Her image is included in the iconic 1972 poster
Some Living American Women Artists by
Mary Beth Edelson.
In 1994, the
Harwood Museum of Art in Taos, part of the
University of New Mexico, announced that it would renovate its Pueblo-revival building and dedicate one wing to Martin's work. The gallery was designed according to the artist's wishes in order to accommodate Martin's gift of seven large untitled paintings made between 1993 and 1994. An Albuquerque architectural firm, Kells & Craig, designed the octagonal gallery with an
oculus Oculus (a term from Latin ''oculus'', meaning 'eye'), may refer to the following
Architecture
* Oculus (architecture), a circular opening in the centre of a dome or in a wall
Arts, entertainment, and media
* ''Oculus'' (film), a 2013 American ...
installed overhead, and four yellow
Donald Judd benches placed directly under the oculus. The gift of the paintings and gallery's design and construction were negotiated and overseen by
Robert M. Ellis, the Harwood's director at the time and a close friend of Martin's. Today, the Agnes Martin Gallery attracts visitors from all over the world and has been compared by scholars to the
Chapelle du Rosaire de Vence (Matisse Chapel), Corbusier's
Chapel of Notre Dame du Haut
Notre-Dame du Haut ( en, Our Lady of the Heights; full name in french: Chapelle Notre-Dame du Haut) is a Roman Catholic chapel in Ronchamp, France. Built in 1955, it is one of the finest examples of the architecture of Franco-Swiss architect Le C ...
in Ronchamp, and the
Rothko Chapel in Houston.
Films about Martin
* 2000: Thomas Luechinger: ''On a Clear Day – Agnes Martin.'' Documentary, 52 minutes.
* 2002: Mary Lance: ''Agnes Martin: With my Back to the World.'' Documentary, 57 minutes.
* 2002/2016 (re-edited): Leon d'Avigdor: ''
Agnes Martin: Between the Lines.'' Documentary, 60 minutes.
* 2016: Kathleen Brennan and Jina Brenneman: ''Agnes Martin Before the Grid''. Documentary, 56 minutes.
In popular culture
Composer
John Zorn
John Zorn (born September 2, 1953) is an American composer, conductor, saxophonist, arranger and producer who "deliberately resists category". Zorn's avant-garde and experimental approaches to composition and improvisation are inclusive of jaz ...
's ''
Redbird'' (1995) was inspired by and dedicated to Martin.
Wendy Beckett, in her book ''American Masterpieces,'' said about Martin: "Agnes Martin often speaks of joy; she sees it as the desired condition of all life. Who would disagree with her?... No-one who has seriously spent time before an Agnes Martin, letting its peace communicate itself, receiving its inexplicable and ineffable happiness, has ever been disappointed. The work awes, not just with its delicacy, but with its vigor, and this power and visual interest is something that has to be experienced."
Poet Hugh Behm-Steinberg's poem "Gridding, after some sentences by Agnes Martin" discusses patterns in the natural world, makes a parallel between writing and painting, and ends with a line about the poet's admiration of Martin's work.
Her work inspired a
Google doodle on the 102nd anniversary of her birth on March 22, 2014. The doodle takes color cues from Agnes Martin's late work which is marked by soft edges, muted colors and distinctly horizontal bands, turned to six vertical bars, one for each letter of the Google logo.
The song "Agnes Martin" by American rock band
Screaming Females, from their album ''
All at Once'', is an ode to the artist.
Bibliography
*
*
See also
*
Carl Andre (born 1935), American sculptor
*
Jo Baer (born 1929), American artist, associated with minimalist art
*
Larry Bell (born 1939), American sculptor
*
Ronald Bladen
Ronald Bladen (July 13, 1918 – February 3, 1988) was a Canadian-born American painter and sculptor. He is particularly known for his large-scale sculptures. His artistic stance, was influenced by European Constructivism, American Hard-Edge ...
(1918–1988), American sculptor
*
Dan Flavin (1933–1996), American installation artist,
fluorescent light sculpture
*
Donald Judd (1928–1994), American sculptor
*
Sol LeWitt (1928-2007), American installation artist
*
Robert Mangold (born 1937), American painter
*
John McCracken (1934-2011), American sculptor
*
Robert Morris (born 1931), American sculptor
*
Robert Ryman (1930-2019), American painter
*
Fred Sandback (1943–2003), American installation artist
*
Tony Smith (1912–1980), pioneer of minimalist sculpture
*
Frank Stella (born 1936), American painter/sculptor
*
Anne Truitt
Anne Truitt (March 16, 1921December 23, 2004), born Anne Dean, was an American sculptor of the mid-20th century.
She became well known in the late 1960s for her large-scale minimalist sculptures, especially after influential solo shows at André ...
(1921-2004), American sculptor
References
Further reading
*
*
* Brennan, Kathleen; Brenneman, Jina (2012)'', Agnes Martin: Before the Grid.'' Taos, New Mexico: Harwood Museum of Art
* An interview with
Arne Glimcher.
*
**Reprinted in
*
*
*
*
*
*
* Régimbal, Christopher.
Agnes Martin: Life & Work'. Toronto: Art Canada Institute, 2019. .
*
External links
Agnes Martin in the collection of The Museum of Modern ArtOral history interview with Agnes Martin, 1989 May 15 Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution
Agnes Martin: Before The Grid, 2012, Documentary Harwood Museum of Art
{{DEFAULTSORT:Martin, Agnes
1912 births
2004 deaths
20th-century American painters
20th-century American printmakers
20th-century American women artists
20th-century LGBT people
21st-century American painters
21st-century American women artists
21st-century LGBT people
Abstract expressionist artists
American abstract artists
American contemporary painters
American women printmakers
Artists from New Mexico
Painters from New York City
Artists from Saskatchewan
Artists from Taos, New Mexico
Canadian emigrants to the United States
Fellows of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Fransaskois people
LGBT artists from Canada
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Lesbian artists
Minimalist artists
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People with schizophrenia
Teachers College, Columbia University alumni
United States National Medal of Arts recipients
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