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Susan Weil

Now, Then and Always

April 22 – May 28, 2021

Swimming Figures, 1958, acrylic on linen, 51 x 51 inches/129.5 x 129.5 cm
Early Landscape, ca. 1958,, acrylic on canvas, 52 x 52 inches/132.1 x 132.1 cm
Walking Figure, 1967, Plexiglas and aluminum, 44 x 25 inches/118.8 x 63.5 cm
Walking Figure, 1967, colored Plexiglas, 12 x 8.75 x 2 inches/30.5 x 22.2 x 5 cm
Walking Figure and Shadow, 1968, acrylic and metallic spray paint on Plexiglas, 13.75 x 13.75 inches/34.9 x 34.9 cm
Walking Figure, 1969, acrylic on linen, 51 x 72 inches/129.5 x 182.9 cm
Standing Figure, 1967, acrylic on Plexiglas, 48.5 x 65 inches/123.2 x 165.1 cm
Apeel, 1983, acrylic on canvas, 36.5 x 25 x 5 inches/92.7 x 63.5 x 12.7 cm
Horizon, 1972, acrylic on canvas and steel rods, 22.5 x 74.5 x 2.75 inches/57.2 x 189.2 x 7 cm
Homage to the Tear 2, 1980, acrylic on paper, 31 x 66 x 5.25 inches/78.7 x 167.6 x 13.3 cm
Field, 1992, acrylic on panels, 40 x 56 x 2 inches/101.6 x 142.2 x 5.1 cm
Leaves Figure, 1998, acrylic on cut paper in glass frame, 30 x 22 inches/76.2 x 55.9 cm
Copper, 1999, acrylic, charcoal and watercolor on paper, 60.5 x 66.25 inches/153.7 x 168.3 cm
Torso, 1999, acrylic on paper, 39 x 27.5 inches/99.1 x 69.9 cm
Trisha Dancing, 2001, acrylic on canvas, 60 x 85 inches/152.4 x 215.9 cm
Man in Red on Bicycle, 2001, acrylic on canvas, 49 x 49 inches/124.5 x 124.5 cm
Winter Interior, 2001, acrylic on canvas, 24 x 70 inches/61 x 177.8 cm
This and That, 2009, acrylic and Plexiglas on canvas, 65.75 x 48.5/167 x 123.2 cm
Realism, 2010, laser-cut mirrored Plexiglas, 36 x 25.5 inches/91.4 x 64.8 cm
Half Moon, 2011, collaboration with José Betancourt, cyanotype and acrylic on canvas, 20 x 13 inches/50.8 x 33 cm
Small Phases of Moon, 2011, collaboration with José Betancourt, cyanotype and acrylic on canvas, 19.5 x 24.5 x 5 inches/49.5 x 61 x 12.7 cm
Moon Cycle, 2012, collaboration with José Betancourt, cyanotype and acrylic on canvas, 56 x 81 inches/142.2 x 205.7 cm
Tears, 2012, collaboration with José Betancourt, acrylic and cyanotype on canvas, 24 x 26 inches/61 x 66 cm
Time's Pace, 2012, acrylic on wood, 37 x 37 inches/94 x 94 cm
Body Shelley, 2014, digital image on backlit Plexiglas and canvas on Sintra board, 77 x 55.5 x 2 inches/195.6 x 141 x 5.1 cm
Perspect, 2014, archival digital print on paper and acrylic sheet, 48 x 27.75 inches/122 x 70.5 cm
Awing, 2017, engraved panels, 38 x 18 x 3.5 inches/96.5 x 45.7 x 8.9 cm
Awing, 2018, acrylic, fabric collage, found paintings on canvas, 25 x 20 inches/63.5 x 50.8 cm
Five Generations, 2019, copper wire mesh on cyanotype on fabric with wood dowels, 85.5 x 63 x 4.25 inches/217.2 x 160 x 10.8 cm
Leafing Blue, 2019, collaboration with José Betancourt, cyanotype on canvas on wood, 82 x 51.25 x 6.25 inches/208.3 x 130.2 x 15.9 cm
Time's Pace Time Space, 2019, acrylic on acrylic sheet, digital print on PVC, steel, 30 x 20.5 x 8 inches/76.2 x 52.1 x 20.3 cm
Scissors for Matisse, 2020, archival digital print on acrylic sheet, 40 x 25 x 2.5 inches/101.6 x 63.5 x 6.4 cm
Sitting in Space, 2020, acrylic, linen and charcoal on canvas, 53 x 33 inches/134.6 x 83.8 cm
Holy Roly Over, 2021, acrylic on canvas, 35.75 x 35.375 x 4.25 inches/90.8 x 89.9 x 10.8 cm
Primary Hidden Secondary, 2021, acrylic on canvas, 36.4 x 21.5 x 6.75 inches/92.5 x 54.6 x 17.1 cm
Squared Circle, 2021, acrylic on canvas, 33.5 x 33.5 x 3.75 inches/85.1 x 85.1 x 9.5 cm
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil
Susan Weil

Press Release


Selected as one of Art in America's must-see shows of the season, this retrospective of work by Susan Weil pays tribute to one of the boldest and most inventive artists of the 20th century. Originally slated to open last spring just before the lockdown, the exhibition coincides with the artist’s 91st birthday. 

Weil is among the key female figures who pushed the boundaries of Abstract Expressionism, a movement largely defined by male painters. As the narrative of modern art is rewritten and women artists are finally entering the spotlight, Weil’s contribution is coming to the fore. Curator Sundaram Tagore says, “Susan Weil is one of the most intrepid artists working today. I’ve had the immense honor of showing her work for 20 years and her expressive power continues to inspire and beguile me.” 
 
Tracing the arc of her career, which spans more than 70 years, this exhibition features Weil’s early landscapes from the 1950s, iconic blueprints (1949–2020), seminal figurative paintings, series inspired by the natural world and work made this year. Rare archival images will also be on view, offering a window into her practice and the formative years of the New York School in the 1950s. 
 
Although Weil was active in New York during the height of the Abstract Expressionist movement, she was not afraid to pursue figuration and reference reality, gaining inspiration from nature, literature, photographs and her personal history. Throughout her career she has brought to life intangible qualities of time and movement, creating multi-dimensional works in which she fractures the picture plane, deconstructing and reconstructing images. She consistently experiments with materials from everyday life, including found objects, metal, paper, plexiglass, recycled canvas and wood. The dynamic and playful results are crumpled, cut and refigured compositions that invite viewers to contemplate multiple perspectives at once.
 
Susan Weil studied under Josef Albers at Black Mountain College, the rural mecca for young artists, composers and choreographers. She often scoured campus rubbish dumps with Robert Rauschenberg to find materials to incorporate in their experimental works. “It was very revolutionary. Black Mountain put together creative people from all the fields,” recalls Weil, who studied painting but also explored dance and poetry. “We’d sit around in the big dining hall and talk about different things we were working on. It was great sharing. We participated in all different mediums.”

This spirit of innovation shaped Weil’s art throughout her career. She moved to New York in 1949 with Rauschenberg when the art scene was erupting. She came of age at the center of the New York School with its eclectic cultural influences and interdisciplinary collaboration. Her peers included artists Cy Twombly, Elaine and Willem de Kooning and Jasper Johns as well as dancer Merce Cunningham and composer John Cage.

Highlights of this retrospective include Weil’s little-seen early painterly landscapes and striking figurative works from the 1960s as well as pieces she’s made in the last two years. Five Generations (2019), for example, is a collaborative work that began in 1930 when Weil’s mother embroidered stars in an accurate constellation onto a sheer tablecloth encircled by a poem of her own creation. Almost 90 years later, Weil’s daughter created a cyanotype of this embroidery evoking the night sky. She commemorated the intergenerational nature of the work with written text hung alongside. Weil then added a series of energetic figures that she drew with her eyes closed and cut out of copper mesh. Her granddaughter completed the piece by attaching the figures, which appear to leap from the blue fabric.
 
Weil’s nebulous human forms in motion have been appearing in her work as far back as Swimming Figures, from 1958. Articulated in ebullient, gestural brushstrokes, the composition beautifully embodies themes the artist has returned to again and again and still explores today, namely, time expressed abstractly and in relation to nature and the figure in movement. 
 
“I’ve spent a lifetime working,” says Weil. “It’s been both a serious and a joyful journey and I have no intention of slowing down.” 
 
ABOUT SUSAN WEIL

Susan Weil was born in New York in 1930 and lives and works in New York.

Notable exhibitions of Weil’s work include Frontiers Reimagined at the 56th Venice Biennale; Bauhaus and America: Experiments in Light and Movement at the LWL-Museum für Kunst und Kultur, Germany; and Leap Before You Look: Black Mountain College 1933–1957, which premiered in 2015 at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, and then traveled to the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles and the Wexner Center for the Arts at Ohio State University, Columbus. Her work was also shown in James Joyce: Shut Your Eyes and See at the Poetry Collection, University of Buffalo, New York; and in Our Own Work, Our Own Way, at The Johnson Collection, Spartanburg, South Carolina in 2020.
 
Weil is the recipient of a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. Her work is included in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; and the Menil Collection, Houston, among others. In 2010, Skira Editore published Susan Weil: Moving Pictures, a comprehensive monograph documenting her large and diverse body of art, livres d’artiste and poetry.
 

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