SCULPTURE FROM FOUR DECADES

Alexandre Gallery

Apr. 28, 2024 - Jun. 8, 2012

41 East 57th Street, 13th Floor
New York, New York 10022
212-755-2828

alexandregallery.com/exhibitions/view/79

March 2012 Anne Arnold | SCULPTURE FROM FOUR DECADES April 26th through June 8th , 2012 Reception for the artist Saturday, April 28th from 1 to 4pm The gallery will present the first one-person exhibition of Anne Arnold’s sculpture in twenty-four years. Surveying work from the 1950s through the 1980s, Anne Arnold: Sculpture from Four Decades will include 29 classic examples of her animals in wood, ceramic, metal and painted or resin-coated canvas stretched over wooden armatures. These works range from a roughly carved creosote coated pine sphinx-like cat to the front end of a life-sized horse in an unbalanced moment of rising up on its legs. In a period when Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Pop Art and many other movements came and went, Arnold persisted down her own path, eventually defining a singular position in American sculpture. While Arnold’s own early role in the development and wide acceptance of Pop is made clear, it can also be argued that Arnold understood better than her peers the traditions of the first “popular” American art forms found in vernacular, vintage folk objects such as weathervanes, decoys and hand-painted country advertising. Arnold’s work is quirky and personal, and humor is often a characteristic. Her animals’ body language is spot-on, whether it be the stretching lean of a cat, the raked ears of a crouching rabbit, or the unexpected lightness and grace of a large farm animal. We know an animal differently after seeing one of Arnold’s sculptures and, perhaps, care about them more for their individual traits evoked so precisely as essential form, gesture and presence. This exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with texts by Chris Crosman and John Yau. The artist will be present for a reception on Saturday, April 28th, from 1 to 4 pm. The gallery is located on the 13th floor of the Fuller Building at 41 East 57th Street.

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