Blythe Bohnen
Blythe Bohnen | |
---|---|
Born |
1940 Evanston, Illinois |
Nationality | American |
Education |
Smith College (BA) Boston University (BFA) Hunter College (MFA) |
Known for | Drawing, photography |
Blythe Bohnen (b. Evanston, Illinois, 1940) is an artist known for her minimalistic graphite drawings and photographs that capture the essence of motion.[1] The drawings and photographs are concerned with gestures and movements that are limited to certain angles, favoring reduction over complexity.[2] Her work is included in the permanent collections of the Asheville Art Museum,[1] Brooklyn Museum,[3] Art Institute of Chicago,[4] and International Center of Photography.[5]
Bohnen earned a Bachelor of Arts in art history at Smith College, Bachelor of Fine Arts at Boston University, and Master of Fine Arts at Hunter College.[2] She was one of the founding members of A.I.R. Gallery, established in New York City in 1972, the first not-for-profit, cooperative exhibition space for women in the United States.[6]
Bohnen's work is generally conceptual in nature, often in the form of self-portraits that capture the motions of her body.[1] She originally created works using predominantly graphite, but added photography to her repertoire in 1974 to continue her exploration of movement and the human form, titling each work after the motions she was making to create each work.[5]
Her drawings feature a grid format that she used to arrange the severely limited and carefully executed motions of her hand that she captured in the graphite, resulting in monochromatic drawings that assert their reality as markings on paper instead of an illusion of something else, as seen in Motion Touching Five Points with Graphite Stick (1973), One Motion with Graphite Stick, Horizontal and Vertical (1974), and Motion Touching Five Points (1975; Art Institute of Chicago).[2][4]
In contrast to her drawings, which focus on the motions of the arm and hand, Bohnen's photographs primarily address the motions of the head.[5] With her photography, Bohnen used various shutter speeds to overlap blurred images to provoke strong emotional and intellectual reactions about motion and identity,[5][7] as in Self-Portrait: Vertical Elliptical Motion, Large (1974; Asheville Art Museum)[1] and Vertical Motion Up Medium: Pivotal Motion Medium (1983; Brooklyn Museum).[3]
References
- 1 2 3 4 "Asheville Art Museum". Retrieved October 24, 2014.
- 1 2 3 "Blythe Bohnen," MATRIX 13 (New Haven, CT: Wadsworth Antheneum, 1975).
- 1 2 Blythe Bohnen, Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved 10/04/2014
- 1 2 Blythe Bohnen, Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 10/4/2014.
- 1 2 3 4 Handy, Ellen, et al. Reflections in a Glass Eye: Works from the International Center of Photography Collection (New York: International Center of Photography, 1999), 209.
- ↑ Swartz, Anne K. "A.I.R. Gallery." In The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art, edited by Joan M. Marter. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011.
- ↑ Koeppel, Fredric. "Brooks Exhibit a Sum of Many Parts—Asst. Curator Creates Spaces with Old, New.” The Commercial Appeal (March 21, 2004).
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