The Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art presents Lois Dodd. Catching the Light, an exhibition on view May 18–August 26, 201.
This first career museum retrospective features paintings that define the places and subjects that have mattered most in the nearly sixty-year career of this American plein-air painter. The exhibition includes images of the places that have mattered most to Dodd: the cityscapes of New York City’s Lower East Side and the woods and gardens of mid-coastal Maine. The exhibition’s 51 works range in date from 1955’s Pasture to 2010’s self-portrait Shadow with Easel.
Lois Dodd, Men’s Shelter, April, 1968, oil on linen, 47 1/2 x 39 1/4 inches; Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, Missouri; Bebe and Crosby Kemper Collection, Museum Purchase made possible by a gift from the Kemper Foundations
Lois Dodd is best known for her works in which she paints the world around her—the cityscapes of New York City and the woods and gardens of Maine and New Jersey. A key member of New York’s postwar art scene, she was a founding member of Tanager Gallery, one of the 10th Street cooperatives, and later taught at Brooklyn College for 25 years. She also found a second home in Maine and became associated with the Lincolnville artists, including Alex Katz and Neil Welliver, before moving to mid-Coast Maine where she has lived and painted en plein air for several decades.
Born in 1927 in Montclair, New Jersey, Dodd first came to live in New York as a student at the Cooper Union. She studied there from 1945–48, a time when New York emerged as the postwar art capital of the world and Abstract Expressionism flourished at the hands of Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock. In 1952, she was the only female co-founder of the Tanager Gallery, along with artists Philip Pearlstein and Charles Cajori, among others. Rather than give in to abstraction and later periods of minimalism and Pop, Dodd has remained faithful to painting her immediate surroundings, whether it be a cityscape or an interior view of her apartment.
Dodd was part of the wave of New York modernists to explore the coast of Maine in the later half of the 20th-century. Like Fairfield Porter, Rackstraw Downes, Alex Katz, and Neil Welliver, Dodd started spending her summers in Maine, beginning in 1951. Attracted by the inexpensive but rambling old farmhouses, endless woods, stone quarries, and the bright sunshine, Dodd and her fellow artists sought both companionship and escape from the demands of city life. At one time, Dodd shared a house with Alex Katz, who in the exhibition catalogue refers to Dodd’s work as, “fresh, honest, direct.” To this day, Dodd can be found trekking through the fields and forests in her Maine environs with canvas and paint supplies in hand.
She often works en plein air, starting paintings on site in the woods or other location and finishing them in her studio. In her exhibition essay, O’Brien writes, “Her paintings are premised on the truth that she stood in this place, with the light casting shadows just so, the temperature of the air warm or cool, the sun warm against her face, protected by the brim of a straw hat; her fingers able to employ brush to linen against the wind of a New Jersey winter.” At times, her observations are so direct that she uses the window to frame her compositions, as seen in the exhibition’s View of Neighbors House in Winter (1977–78).
Like artists before her, Dodd often returns to the same location and views to explore at different times of day and times of year. Lois Dodd: Catching the Light includes a number of views of a men’s shelter outside her Lower East Side apartment that become studies of light, architecture, and the city. In the exhibition’s Men’s Shelter, April, 1968 (1968), one sees the verdant grass of spring with shadows cast by the surrounding architecture of the neighboring buildings, depicted through her flat blocks of color. About Dodd, artist Will Barnet said in an interview, “she has this broad imagery and also this ability to do different subjects and give them what was important in that particular moment. She has an extraordinary body of feeling about the possibility of imagery that can be so different from each other, yet each a work of art, which is not easy to do.”
With a career that spans six decades, Dodd is currently a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the National Academy of Design, and a member of the board of governors for the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Among many honors, she recently was awarded the Benjamin West Clinedinist Memorial Medal in 2007 from the Artists’ Fellowship, Inc. and Cooper Union’s Augustus Saint-Gaudens Award for professional achievement in art in 2005. Her works can be found in museums, including New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art; Portland Museum of Art, Maine, and the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, Missouri, among others.
The exhibition is organized by the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art and curated by Barbara O’Brien, the Museum’s chief curator. A full-color catalogue will accompany the exhibition with essays by O’Brien; John Yau, poet, curator and professor at Rutgers University; and Alison Ferris, curator at the John Michael Kohler Art Center, Sheboygan, Wisconsin. After showing at the Kemper Museum, the exhibition travels to the Portland Museum of Art in Maine, where it will be on view in early 2013.
Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art
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