A Lyrical Collaboration

By Kurt Loft
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A Lyrical Moment for the Eyes – and Ears

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July 7 from 7-9 pm
Free
USF Contemporary Art Museum
Details here

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Two visionary women of the art world combine for a powerful impression in the new exhibition The Lyrical Moment: Modern and Contemporary Abstraction by Helen Frankenthaler and Heather Gwen Martin, through July 30 at the University of South Florida Contemporary Art Museum. This Thursday evening, students and faculty from the USF School of Music perform original interpretations of the visual artwork.
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Helen Frankenthaler, Ganymede, 1978. soft-ground and sugar-lift etching and aquatint, 22-1/2 x 16-1/2 in., AP 5/12. Gift of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, University of South Florida Collection. © 2022 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Tyler Graphics Ltd., Bedford Village, New York – photo by Will Lytch

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The Lyrical Moment
is installed as two thematically linked galleries featuring these visual artists from different generations – Frankenthaler was born in 1928 and died a decade ago; Martin was born in 1977 and continues to work in her studio in Los Angeles.

The exhibition is part of the core mission of the USF Contemporary Art Museum – bringing to the Tampa Bay community vital, investigative and scholarly contemporary shows that are technically and conceptually innovative, says Margaret A. Miller, director of the USF Institute for Research in Art.
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Helen Frankenthaler, Geisha, 2003. woodcut, 38-1/2 x 26-1/4 in., HC III/III. Gift of the Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, University of South Florida Collection. © 2022 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc. / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York / Pace Editions, Inc., New York – photo by Will Lytch

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Frankenthaler’s painterly and experimental prints include woodcut, screen-printing, intaglio, lithography and mixed media. She broke new grounds through a technique known as the “pour method,” using thinned paint on raw canvases.

Martin’s canvases reflect a digital world with hard edged forms and color reflective of pop art. Both women share a process that engages immediacy, improvisation and innovation, adds Miller, who says viewers can compare affinities and differences in color palettes and grounds while recognizing the legacy of Frankenthaler in the work of Martin.
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Heather Gwen Martin, Fever Dream, 2021. oil on linen, 60 x 56 in. © Heather Gwen Martin. Courtesy of L.A. Louver, Los Angeles and Miles McEnery Gallery, New York – photo by Jeff McLane.

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“While modern and contemporary abstraction may seem challenging for viewers, this exhibition is powerful and frankly beautiful,” she says. “It seems to me that this is an appropriate exhibition post COVID.”

Visitors with no knowledge of these artists or of modern trends will benefit from a free gallery catalog that includes essays by Shannon Annis, curator of the museum’s collection; Ruth Fine, curator, lecturer and writer formerly with the National Gallery of Art in Washington; and Christian Viveros-Fauné, a New York arts writer and curator-at-large who helped organized the USF show.
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“This exhibition is a conversation between rule breakers” in the art world, Viveros-Fauné says. “It’s less about a direct line of influence (of one artist on the other) than a conversation across generations.”

Through her watered-down paint technique, Frankenthaler revolutionized abstract painting and “made lyrical what had previously been very muscular and very male,” he adds. “She classed up the joint a bit. The pour method is hers. Martin worked for DC Comics, and her paintings resemble comic books or stuff you’d seen on a screen.”

The exhibition also offers an aural dimension, when students and faculty from the USF School of Music perform original interpretations of the art with live performances July 7 from 7 to 9 p.m. in the galleries.
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Concert in the Galleries
Thursday, July 7 from 7 to 9 pm
Free

The Lyrical Moment: Modern and Contemporary
Abstraction by Helen Frankenthaler and Heather Gwen Martin

is on display through July 30

USF Contemporary Art Museum
Tampa campus, 4202 E. Fowler Ave.
Admission is free
Gallery Hours: Friday 10 am to 5 pm, Thursday 10 am to 8 pm, Saturday 1-4 pm.
usfcam.usf.edu/CAM
813-974-4133 or caminfo@usf.edu
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Installation view of The Lyrical Moment at USF Contemporary Art Museum. Artworks © Heather Gwen Martin. Courtesy of L.A. Louver, Los Angeles and Miles McEnery Gallery, New York – photo by Will Lytch

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