![]() Louise Nevelson: Sculptor of Shadows / Skyggernes Skulptør, Kunsten Museum of Modern Art, Aalborg, Denmark, May 29, 2020–January 3, 2021. ![]() Online: Louise Nevelson, Pace Gallery, December 9–30, 2020. Louise Nevelson, Kamel Mennour Gallery, Paris, May 7–July 24, 2021. Louise Nevelson: Collages 1957–1982, Kayne Griffin, Los Angeles, September 17–October 30, 2021. Louise Nevelson: Mirage, Pace Gallery, Palo Alto, California, February 25–April 9, 2022. Louise Nevelson, Locks Gallery, Philadelphia, March 1–March 31, 2022. Persistence, The Louise Nevelson Foundation (official Collateral Event of the 59th International Art Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia), Procuratie Vecchie, Piazza San Marco, Venice, April 23–September 11, 2022. Louise Nevelson, Pace Gallery, Los Angeles, March 11–April 29, 2023. The World Outside: Louise Nevelson at Midcentury, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas, August 27, 2023–January 7, 2024 ![]() Although her practice is situated in lineage with Picasso’s Cubism and Vladimir Tatlin’s Constructivism, the pictorial attitude of her work and her interest in the transcendence of object and space reveal an affinity with Abstract Expressionism. Nevelson’s compositions explore the relational possibilities of sculpture and space, summing up the objectification of the external world into a personal landscape. In 2018, the exhibition The Face in the Moon, was mounted at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, focusing on her work in drawing, printing, and collage, and spanning her progression from the human body into abstraction. Her representation was underscored by a brief affiliation Sidney Janis Gallery, New York, in 1962, which positioned her as the first sculptor and first female Abstract Expressionist within Janis’s roster and was followed representation by Pace in 1963 to the present. Nevelson had her first exhibition with The Pace Gallery, Boston, in 1961. Soon thereafter, the Museum of Modern Art acquired Sky Cathedral (1958), further championing her work with the inclusion of Dawn’s Wedding Feast (1959) in the seminal group exhibition Sixteen Americans (1959–60). In 1956, the Whitney Museum of American Art acquired Black Majesty (1955) and the following year the Brooklyn Museum acquired First Personage (1956). This development was encouraged in the form of acquisitions from three New York museums. By the late 1940s and early 1950s, Nevelson had traveled to Guatemala and Mexico to view Pre-Colombian art and began to produce a series of wood landscape sculptures.Īn interest in shadow and space materialized in her first all-black sculptures, introducing a visual language that came to characterize much of her work from the mid-1950s onward. She received her first one-person exhibition at the Nierendorf Gallery, New York, in 1941-the first of several with the gallery throughout a decade punctuated by travels to Europe, explorations in printmaking, and work at the Sculpture Center in New York. ![]() Nevelson participated in several group shows throughout the 1930s, the first of which was organized by the Secession Gallery and held at the Brooklyn Museum in 1935. ![]()
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