Paper Louise Tiny Fishman Rock April 29 – August 14; Opening Reception: April 29, 6:30 – 8:30 PM; Institute of Contemporary Art University of Pennsylvania

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Paper Louise Tiny Fishman Rock

April 29 – August 14

Opening Reception: April 29, 6:30 – 8:30 PM

Institute of Contemporary Art

University of Pennsylvania

118 S. 36th Street

Philadelphia, PA 10104

The Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia is pleased to present an unusual look at the work of Louise Fishman. Highly regarded for a deep range of abstract paintings, Fishman has long been occupied with the potential that small scale and sculpture hold for her art. Focusing on these lesser-known aspects, Paper Louise Tiny Fishman Rock concentrates other intimate and potent concerns: the artist’s Philadelphia roots, her feminist and queer politics, Jewish identity, friendships with Agnes Martin and Eva Hesse, and her meditations on the grid.

Paper Louise Tiny Fishman Rock presents a selection of sketchbooks, miniature paintings, and small sculptures. Not much bigger than two inches by three inches, the miniatures are as completely realized as full-breadth canvases. The sculptures have been constructed largely from found objects—with some cast in bronze from plaster models—and are so elemental in form and substance, they appear almost geologic. Filled with mediums and modes of mark making, the books are bursting with narrative drive like Amazonian comics rendered abstract. There will also be some very early works, including a self-portrait of the artist as a blonde boxer.

Based in New York since the 1960s, Fishman comments on her formative development and involvement in the feminist movement, in which she was an activist for gay rights: “Franz Kline and Willem de Kooning were big for me—Joan Mitchell too. Then Minimalism came along and I was looking at Sol LeWitt and making hard-edge grid paintings. My group encouraged me to see that everything I was doing as a painter—…even using stretched canvas and a paintbrush—was male, and this was problematic. I always hated women’s work—growing up first a tomboy, then an athlete, I never sewed.” The ICA exhibition shows how Fishman attacked these problems and, in the process, granted herself permission to paint on the heroic scale with the freedom she now possesses.

The ICA exhibition takes place in tandem with Louise Fishman: A Retrospective, a fifty-year survey of Fishman’s art at the Neuberger Museum of Art, State University of New York, Purchase. Relative to this comprehensive painting show, Paper Louise Tiny Fishman Rock is conceived as a studio visit: a chance for viewers to see bodies of work that represent a largely private practice. Including some of the objects Fishman has collected over the years, as well as other surprises, the installation was composed in close collaborations between the artist, curator Ingrid Schaffner, and ICA preparator, the artist Paul Swenbeck.

Paper Louise Tiny Fishman Rock is organized by former ICA chief curator Ingrid Schaffner, currently Curator, 57th Carnegie International, 2018, Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh. The exhibition is accompanied by a major monograph, co-published by ICA with Neuberger Museum of Art and DelMonico Books/Prestel. It features a curatorial essay by Helaine Posner, Louise Fishman: The Energy in the Rectangle; essay contributions by Carrie Moyer and Nancy Princenthal, and an interview with the artist by Schaffner.

ABOUT LOUISE FISHMAN

Louise Fishman (b. 1939, Philadelphia) attended the Philadelphia College of Art, Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, Tyler School of Art (BFA, 1963), and University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (MFA, 1965). In 1988, a trip to Eastern Europe, where she visited Auschwitz and Terezin, profoundly impacted her painting. Her work, which has been the subject of solo exhibitions, was recently featured in the 2014 Whitney Biennial, alongside that of Jacqueline Humphries, Dona Nelson, Laura Owens, and Amy Sillman, in a section artist-curator Michelle Grabner dedicated to female painters “who take on the authority of abstract painting—its history, its ambition, and its relationship to power and gender.”

Fishman’s art has also been closely followed in Philadelphia over the years: in 1993 three simultaneous exhibitions, with a publication by Judith Stein, explored distinct aspects of her work. In 2013 the artist examined her own legacy in relation to the work of her mother Gertrude Fisher-Fishman, and her aunt Razel Kapustin—both painters—in an exhibition at the Woodmere Art Museum.

Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania

118 South 36th Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104

www.icaphila.org

 

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