Kendall Shaw
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George Kendall Shaw (March 30, 1924 – October 18, 2019) was an American painter who was based in
New Orleans New Orleans ( , ,New Orleans
Merriam-Webster.
; french: La Nouvelle-Orléans , es, Nuev ...
, with a career spanning a number of art styles—ranging from
abstract expressionism Abstract expressionism is a post–World War II art movement in American painting, developed in New York City in the 1940s. It was the first specifically American movement to achieve international influence and put New York at the center of the ...
to pop art to
minimalism In visual arts, music and other media, minimalism is an art movement that began in post–World War II in Western art, most strongly with American visual arts in the 1960s and early 1970s. Prominent artists associated with minimalism include Don ...
to pattern and design to color field—with heightened emotion, pattern, shape, and vivid color predominant. Shaw's work includes a series of 30 paintings based on the
Torah The Torah (; hbo, ''Tōrā'', "Instruction", "Teaching" or "Law") is the compilation of the first five books of the Hebrew Bible, namely the books of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers and Deuteronomy. In that sense, Torah means the s ...
of the
Old Testament The Old Testament (often abbreviated OT) is the first division of the Christian biblical canon, which is based primarily upon the 24 books of the Hebrew Bible or Tanakh, a collection of ancient religious Hebrew writings by the Israelites. The ...
, as well as recent work with pure colors that he terms “Cajun Minimalism.”


Life and career

Shaw was born in
New Orleans New Orleans ( , ,New Orleans
Merriam-Webster.
; french: La Nouvelle-Orléans , es, Nuev ...
and attended high school there. In 1943, he enlisted in the United States Navy, where he was a radioman on an SPB Dauntless dive-bomber while searching for German submarines off the mid-Atlantic coast. After the war, he attended the
Georgia Institute of Technology The Georgia Institute of Technology, commonly referred to as Georgia Tech or, in the state of Georgia, as Tech or The Institute, is a public research university and institute of technology in Atlanta, Georgia. Established in 1885, it is part of ...
and
Tulane University Tulane University, officially the Tulane University of Louisiana, is a private university, private research university in New Orleans, Louisiana. Founded as the Medical College of Louisiana in 1834 by seven young medical doctors, it turned into ...
, graduating from Tulane in 1949 with a B.S. in Chemistry. From 1950–1951, he took courses in art as well as organic chemistry at
Louisiana State University Louisiana State University (officially Louisiana State University and Agricultural and Mechanical College, commonly referred to as LSU) is a public land-grant research university in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. The university was founded in 1860 nea ...
, studying with visiting painter O. Louis Guglielmi. In 1951, Shaw moved to the New York City area as a chemical researcher for
Stauffer Chemical Stauffer Chemical Company was an American chemical company which manufactured herbicides and pesticides for various agricultural crops. It was acquired by Imperial Chemical Industries from Chesebrough-Pond's Inc. in 1987. In 1987, Stauffer's head ...
. In New York, he continued his relationship with Guglielmi at
The New School The New School is a private research university in New York City. It was founded in 1919 as The New School for Social Research with an original mission dedicated to academic freedom and intellectual inquiry and a home for progressive thinkers. ...
, also studying there with Stuart Davis and at the
Brooklyn Museum The Brooklyn Museum is an art museum located in the New York City borough of Brooklyn. At , the museum is New York City's second largest and contains an art collection with around 1.5 million objects. Located near the Prospect Heights, Crown H ...
with
Ralston Crawford Ralston Crawford (1906–1978) was an American abstract painter, lithographer, and photographer. Early life He was born on September 5, 1906, in St. Catharines, Ontario, and spent his childhood in Buffalo, New York. He studied art beginning in ...
.Houston, David; Marticia Sawin, Bruce Russell, Kendall Shaw (2009). ''Kendall Shaw: Let there Be Light''. Ogden Museum of Southern Art, Inc.,University of New Orleans. pp. 3, 7, 15–16. Waller, Richard (1999) ''Kendall Shaw: A Life's Journey In Art''. Marsh Art Gallery, University of Richmond, p. 9 From Davis, he acquired the concepts of using color as music, with all shapes in a painting positive, no one shape dominating others. In 1953, he left Stauffer Chemical, determined to pursue his art, and went back to the Deep South where he tried his hand at oil prospecting. In 1957, Shaw returned to Tulane, where he taught and was graduated in 1959 with a Master In Fine Arts (MFA). During this period, Shaw was a teaching assistant to
Ida Kohlmeyer Ida Rittenberg Kohlmeyer (3 November 1912 – 24 January 1997) was an American painter and sculptor who lived and worked in Louisiana. Kohlmeyer took up painting in her 30s and achieved wide recognition for her work in art museums and galleries ...
and Kurt Kranz, also studying with
George Rickey George Warren Rickey (June 6, 1907 – July 17, 2002) was an American kinetic sculptor. Early life and education Rickey was born on June 6, 1907, in South Bend, Indiana. When Rickey was still a child, his father, an executive with Singer S ...
, and particularly with
Mark Rothko Mark Rothko (), born Markus Yakovlevich Rothkowitz (russian: Ма́ркус Я́ковлевич Ротко́вич, link=no, lv, Markuss Rotkovičs, link=no; name not Anglicized until 1940; September 25, 1903 – February 25, 1970), was a Latv ...
, who was teaching at Tulane. From Rothko, Shaw acquired his use of color to convey feeling and emotion, and his view that a good painting should communicate the painter's emotions directly to the observer, particularly through color. Rothko taught him, as Shaw puts it, "that painting is a live animal, and the color is its blood." In 1961, Shaw became a permanent resident of New York City, working, over a teaching career of 25 years, as an assistant professor at Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture; acting director of the Brooklyn Museum's Art School, and instructing at
Hunter College Hunter College is a public university in New York City. It is one of the constituent colleges of the City University of New York and offers studies in more than one hundred undergraduate and postgraduate fields across five schools. It also admi ...
;
Lehman College Lehman College is a public college in the Bronx borough of New York City. Founded in 1931 as the Bronx campus of Hunter College, the school became an independent college within CUNY in September 1967. The college is named after Herbert H. Lehma ...
; the
Fashion Institute of Technology The Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT) is a public college in New York City. It is part of the State University of New York (SUNY) and focuses on art, business, design, mass communication, and technology connected to the fashion industry. It ...
and Parsons School for Design at the New School.


1960s–1970s

While Shaw's mature works derive from his fascination with the rhythms of energy, he had begun to move away from geometric abstraction and gray color tones of the Minimalists for a more fluid and alive style of colors, grids and patterns. He first became known, however, for a series of silhouette paintings from 1962–1966 of energy filled sports action that verged on the abstract with featureless cutout shapes of figures or even body parts involved in action, such as a hand or leg, set against a stark background of two or three contrasting colors, such as white on red and black on gray.Houston et al. (2009), p. 8 By the late 1960s, Shaw had begun to reach into his New Orleans roots of jazz and the bright multi-colors of Mardi Gras and New Orleans houses and subtropical flora. He experimented with solid color panels that made the human-scaled wall spaces part of the painting, reinforcing this in some works by painting the edges of the canvas. In the mid-1970s, he became one of the artists involved in creating the
Pattern and Decoration Pattern and Decoration was a United States art movement from the mid-1970s to the early 1980s. The movement has sometimes been referred to as "P&D" or as The New Decorativeness. The movement was championed by the gallery owner Holly Solomon. The ...
( P&D) movement. He used his own invented patterns taken from rhythmic energy, rather than any directly based on historic patterning systems. His color notes did not completely resolve themselves into larger configurations and predictable patterns. Instead, minute interactions of adjacent colors set up mosaic-like patterns and rhythmic grids of small rectangles and circles. Squares formed by an accumulation of diagonals and shapes were delineated by contrasting colors. Squares stabilized the centers of many of the paintings, while multi-color modulations and harmonies blended and changed across the face of the painting like jazz, the colors and shapes variations on a color theme. He experimented using small mirrors as part of the color patterns to reflect light back to the viewer, as well as incorporating fabric, buttons and ribbons. His series of Emma Lottie paintings from this period were made in remembrance of his father's suffragette mother, who worked to end child labor and have New Orleans create a water and sewage system to end water-born illnesses that plagued the city. Color patterns weave throughout the paintings like quilting, interspersed with bits of ribbon, fabric and gemstones referencing his grandmother's embroidery. Like others in Pattern and Decoration, he became interested in theatrical costuming and set design, and worked with Herbert Machiz, the director, on a number of stage productions, including ‘’Knights of the Roundtable” by
Jean Cocteau Jean Maurice Eugène Clément Cocteau (, , ; 5 July 1889 – 11 October 1963) was a French poet, playwright, novelist, designer, filmmaker, visual artist and critic. He was one of the foremost creatives of the su ...
and “The First Reader”, a musical with words by
Gertrude Stein Gertrude Stein (February 3, 1874 – July 27, 1946) was an American novelist, poet, playwright, and art collector. Born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, in the Allegheny West neighborhood and raised in Oakland, California, Stein moved to Paris ...
.


1980s–2010s

In the 1980s, he added a new element, screwing similar squared paintings of various sizes over each other for a layered effect with each layer serving as a pattern and color scheme to counterpoint or complement the others. The most noted of these is “Sunship for John Coltrane” (1990), on loan to and displayed by the
Ogden Museum of Southern Art The Ogden Museum of Southern Art is located in the Warehouse Arts District of downtown New Orleans, Louisiana. Established in 1999, and in Stephen Goldring Hall at 925 Camp Street since 2003. The building The Ogden consists of two main buildin ...
. In the 1990s, he began painting layers over tape, then removing the tape to create patterns, shapes and lines of melodic color as a form of improvisation While the paintings are abstract and not representational, they use Shaw's scientific view that the world is made up of energized particles in constant flux. Through light's energy source comes color, making colors themselves energy sources that can communicate emotions, moods and perhaps transcendental meaning to the viewer. The grids on a 45 degree angle from this period are not rigid. Instead they are created as lines of dots of color modulations and variations, much like the French Pointillists. The counterpoint of the colors, lines and shapes makes them blend and flow into each other, creating different and echoing sub-patterns within the painting which are “continuously forcing the eye into a scanning motion.” The grid design is further broken up by paint strokes splashed across the painting, which Shaw uses as a Dionysian element of disorder across the Apollonian logic behind the grids. . In the 1980s, Shaw began a series of paintings on events in the Torah of the Old Testament utilizing all the elements he had incorporated into his work. He continued on this series of 30 paintings until 2011, when 21 of his sur-abstract paintings were exhibited at St. Peter's Lutheran Church in New York City. His latter work extended his original modular painting of the mid to late 1960s, when modularity and Minimalism began to be used in painting as well as sculpture. Shaw used arrangements of vertical flat solid color panels designed to be hung apart at specified distances. The interstices are not uniform but varied with human scale. The wall space between the units thus becomes an inseparable part of the painting. Rich, contrasting colors painted on the sides of the panels add to this integration with the wall. The intent is to make the wall less of a barrier or an enclosure to the observer by giving life to the painting-wall as an expanded picture plane that brings unity into the space. Panel dimensions of 8' x 2' add to the human presence in this painting-wall relationship based on
Le Corbusier Charles-Édouard Jeanneret (6 October 188727 August 1965), known as Le Corbusier ( , , ), was a Swiss-French architect, designer, painter, urban planner, writer, and one of the pioneers of what is now regarded as modern architecture. He was ...
's human module of a man with his hands raised above his head. Panels may be in single units or they may be bolted in pairs. The distances placed between them correspond directly to the panels' different widths of 1' and 2'. Complete units comprise three or four panels in three or four closely related colors.Murdock, ''Modular Painting: Albright-Knox Art Gallery'' In a rebellion against the limited and somber colors of Minimalism, Shaw's New Orleans background of Mardi Gras influences the brightness, rhythm and color combinations of the units. The modular paintings are based on the Abstract Expressionist view "that reflected color from a panel is vibrating energy which in a large field creates an emotional reaction from an observer than could lead to a sublime feeling." The emotions Shaw hopes to bring are the joys of living and a celebration of life. In January 2017, the National Arts Club in New York City honored Mr. Shaw for his artistic contributions by making him an Honorary Lifetime member. Shaw died at his home in Brooklyn, New York in October 2019.


Selected solo exhibitions

2016 1GAP Gallery, New York, NY; 2016 Wake Forest University, Haines Gallery, Wake-forest, NC; 2015 National Arts Club, New York, NY; 2012 Lowe Art Gallery, Hudson Guild, New York, NY (with Danny Simmons); 2011 St. Peter's Lutheran Church New York, NY; 2011 Skoto Gallery, New York, NY; 2007 Ruskin Gallery/East Anglia University, Cambridge, England; 2004 Ogden Museum of Southern Art; Pierro Art Gallery, South Orange, NJ; 2001 Tulane University, New Orleans, LA.; 1999 Marsh Art Gallery, University of Richmond Museums, Richmond, VA.; 1998 The Gallery Space of South Orange, NJ; 1992 Artists Space, New York, NY; 1982, 1981, 1979 Lerner/Heller Gallery, New York, NY; 1976 Alessandra Gallery, New York, NY; 1972 John Bernard Myers Gallery, New York, NY; 1968, 1967, 1965, 1963 Tibor de Nagy Gallery, New York, NY


Selected group exhibitions

2019-2020 Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, Ca. ''With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art, 1972-1985''; 2018-2019 Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans, La., "BIG"; 2018-2019 Ludwig Forum, Achen, Germany, ''"Pattern and Decoration:Ornament As Promise"''; 2017 ''I Love John Giorno'': curated and produced by Ugo Rondinone. Hunter College and twelve other Manhattan locations; 2016 Blue Door Art Center, Yonkers, NY, ''"Inclusion"''; 2014 Anita Shapolsky Gallery, New York, NY, ''The Hard Line''; 2014 Tibor De Nagy Gallery, New York, NY, ''Starting Out: 9 Abstract Painters, 1958-1971''; 2014 Anita Shapolsky Gallery, New York, NY, ''The Expressive Edge of Paper,''; 2014 Rush Arts Gallery, New York, NY, ''"I Kan Do Dat,"''curated by Danny Simmons); 2010 Lowe Art Gallery, Hudson Guild, New York, NY, ''Whitman's Calamas''; 2009 Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans, LA; 2007 Leslie/Lohan Gallery, New York, NY, ''Artists In the Theatre''; 2002 Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans, La. ''Contemporary Art From the Ogden Museum''; 2001 Ogden Museum of Southern Art, New Orleans, LA.; 2000 Gallery 128, New York, NY; 1999, 1998, 1997, 1995, 1994 Lowe Art Gallery, Hudson Guild, New York, NY; 1997 New London Art Society and Gallery, New London, CT.; La Mama La Galleria, New York, NY; 1992 & 2014
Anita Shapolsky Gallery The Anita Shapolsky Gallery is an art gallery that was founded in 1982 by Anita Shapolsky. It is currently located at 152 East 65th Street, on Manhattan's Upper East Side, in New York City. The gallery specializes in 1950s and 1960s abstract e ...
, New York, NY; 1983 Aaron Berman Gallery, New York, NY; Spectrum Gallery, New York, NY; 1982, 1981 Lerner/Heller Gallery, New York, NY; 1981 University of South Florida, Tampa, FL. ''Pattern and Decoration''; Marilyn Pearl Gallery, New York, NY ''Pattern and Decoration''; Millennium Gallery, New York, NY ''Pattern Painting''; 1980 Neue Galerie Sammlung, Aachen, Germany ''Les Nouveaux Fauves''; Heintz-Holtmann Galerie, Hanover, Germany; Krinzinger Galerie, Innsbruck, Switzerland; Modern Art Gallery, Vienna, Austria; Danny Keller Galerie, Munich, Germany; Basel Art Fair, Basel, Germany; Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL. Curator, ''Pattern and Decoration''; 1979 Andre Zarre Gallery, New York, NY ''Persistent Patterns''; Art Sources, Jacksonville, FL. ''Pattern and Decoration''; Galerie Liatowitsch, Basel, Switzerland; Galerie Habermann, Hanover and Cologne, Germany; 1978 Gladstone-Villani Gallery, New York, NY ''Pattern and Decoration''; 1977 Rice University, Houston, TX. Curator, ''Pattern and Decoration''; P.S. 1, New York, NY ''Pattern Painting''; Lehigh University, Bethlehem, PA. ''Pattern, Grid and System Art''; 1976 Alessandra Gallery, New York, NY ''Pattern Painting''; 1974 Brooklyn Museum, New York, NY; Hirshi & Adler Gallery, New York, NY; 1970 Albright-Knox Gallery, Buffalo, NY ''Modular Painting''


References


External links

*https://southwritlarge.com/articles/portfolio-paintings-5/ *https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFoItrebBmA&t=24s&ab_channel=TTGriffithArchives *https://www.huffpost.com/entry/a-conversation-with-paint_b_2353194 {{DEFAULTSORT:Shaw, Kendall 1924 births 2019 deaths 20th-century American painters American male painters 21st-century American painters Artists from New Orleans United States Navy personnel of World War II Georgia Tech alumni Tulane University alumni Louisiana State University alumni The New School alumni Columbia University faculty Hunter College faculty Lehman College faculty Fashion Institute of Technology faculty Parsons School of Design faculty 21st-century American chemists Painters from Louisiana Scientists from New York (state) United States Navy sailors 20th-century American male artists