User:Mk8959/sandbox

Background and education[edit]
Gallagher was born on December 16, 1965 in Providence, Rhode Island. Referred to as African American,[3] she is of biracial ethnicity; her father's heritage was from Cape Verde, in Western Africa (but he was born in the United States), and her mother's background was Caucasian Irish Catholic.[4]

Gallagher's mother was a working-class Irish-American and her father was a professional boxer.

In Rhode Island, Gallagher attended Moses Brown, an elite, Quaker college preparatory school. At sixteen, Gallagher entered her first year at Oberlin College in Ohio (1982–84) and studied writing.[4] Gallagher did not finish her education at Oberlin College and ended up joining a carpenters' union in Seattle. In 1989 she attended Studio 70 in Fort Thomas, Kentucky before earning a degree in fine arts from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston in 1992.[4][5] Her art education further continued in 1993 at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Maine.[5] Ellen Gallagher, Wiglette from "DeLuxe" 2004–2005

Career
Gallagher became recognized in 1995. Prior to her Gagosian showing, Gallagher had solo shows at Mary Boone in Soho, New York and Anthony D'Offay in London, with Mary Boone being her first solo show in New York. Before her art career, Gallagher worked as a commercial fisherman in Alaska and Maine. As her first solo show in New York, Gallagher chose Mary Boone's space because of its neutrality, in which she stated, "because there the abstract qualities of my work stand out first". In 1993, Gallagher continued her art studies at the Skowhegan School of Paintings and Sculpture in Maine.

Work[edit]
Gallagher is an abstract painter and multimedia artist creating minimalist work with subject narratives. Gallagher's influences include the paintings of Agnes Martin and the repetitive writings of Gertrude Stein.[6] Some of Gallagher's work involves repetitively modifying advertising found in African American focused publications such as Ebony, Sepia, and Our World.[6]Her most famous pieces are her grid-like collages of magazines grouped together into larger pieces.[7] Examples of these are eXelento (2004), Afrylic (2004), and DeLuxe (2005). Each of these works contains as many as or more than 60 prints employing techniques of photogravure, spit-bite, collage, cutting, scratching, silkscreen, offset lithography and hand-building. Gallagher also glues notebook paper drawings onto her canvas to create textured surfaces.

Some of Gallagher's early influences while attending the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston were the Darkroom Collective, a group of poets living and working out of Inman Square in Cambridge, MA[8] and would go on to become the art coordinator of the collective. The Darkroom collective allowed Gallagher to explore her talent and apply her culture as an African-American woman to her work. One of her first exhibits took place at the Dark Room in 1989. Some other influences at the Museum School were Susan Denker, Ann Hamilton, Kiki Smith and Laylah Ali.[8]

Themes related to race are often evident in Gallagher's work, sometimes using pictographs, symbols, codes and repetitions. "Sambo lips" and "bug eyes," references to the Black minstrel shows, are often scattered throughout Gallagher's works. Additionally, Gallagher would use these symbols in her collage pieces, inspired by lined yellow paper schoolchildren use. Certain characters are also used repeatedly, such as the image of the nurse or the "Pegleg" character that sometimes populate her page's iconography. Some of her pieces may explicitly reference the issue of race while also having a more subtle undercurrent related to race.[9] She was inspired by the New Negro movement as well as modernist abstraction. Gallagher also uses found historical images in her work. She combines formality (grid lines, ruled paper) with the racial stereotypes to depict the "ordering principles" society imposes.[10]

As well as using racially charged imagery, Gallagher is known to portray bodies and include elements of poetry and pop culture in her work. She uses golden tones to portray the the racial binary in society.

Her media includes paintings, works on paper, film and video. She has made innovative use of materials, such as creating a unique variation on scrimshaw by carving images into the surface of thick sheets of watercolor paper and drawing with ink, watercolor and pencil. These works depict sea creatures, of the mythical undersea world of Drexciya, which were the progeny of slaves who had drowned.[6][12][13] This mythology had been conceived by a musical duo of that name, from Detroit.[14] Gallagher commented upon the process of creating these pieces: "The way that these drawings are made is my version of scrimshaw, the carving into bone that sailors did when they were out whaling. I imagine them in this overwhelming, scary expanse of sea where this kind of cutting would give a focus, a sense of being in control of something."[15] In some pieces, Gallagher would cut out letters to create codes. In some of her early pieces, she painted and drew on sheets of penmanship paper (ruled paper used for handwriting practice) she had pasted onto canvas.[6] Her choice of penmanship paper is significant, in an interview with Jessica Morgan, she says "the sense of a neutral surface that can accommodate any mark seems an ideal way of communicating freedom,"[16]which is described by her as "idiosyncratic" and "inscrutable". [17]

As her previous work has been critiqued for being too racially charged, her newer work contains less explicit racial images to challenge viewers.

In 1995, Gallagher's work was exhibited at the Whitney Biennial and the Venice Biennale in 2003.[18] Artist Chuck Close created a 2009 tapestry portrait of Gallagher.[19]Gallagher is represented by Gagosian Gallery (New York) and Hauser & Wirth (London). She is based in the United States (New York City) and the Netherlands (Rotterdam).[5]

Awards and fellowships[edit]
Among the honors which Gallagher has earned are:[20]


 * Ann Gund Scholarship, Skowhegan School of Art, Skowhegan, ME (1993)
 * Traveling Scholar Award, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA (1993)
 * Provincetown Fine Arts Work Center Fellow (1995)
 * MacDowell Colony, New Hampshire (1996)
 * Joan Mitchell Fellowship (1997)
 * American Academy Award in Art (2000)
 * Medal of Honor, School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2001)

Selected exhibitions[edit]
Ellen Gallagher's work has been featured in solo exhibitions at numerous galleries and institutions including:[5]


 * Drawing Center, New York City Preserve (2001)[21]
 * Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston USA "Watery Ecstatic" (2001)[22]
 * Henry Art Gallery, Seattle, Washington, USA Preserve/Murmur (2004)
 * Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, Florida, USA, Ellen Gallagher: DeLuXe (2005)
 * Freud Museum, London, UK Ellen Gallagher: Ichthyosaurus (2005)
 * Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City, Ellen Gallagher: DeLuXe (2005)
 * Tate Liverpool, UK, Ellen Gallagher (2007)
 * Tate Modern London, UK AxMe (2013)
 * Sara Hilden's Museum, Finland (2013)
 * Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany (2014)
 * Gagosian Gallery, New York

Group exhibitions have included:[5]


 * Boston Public Library Word and Image (1992)[23]
 * Clark Gallery, Lincoln, MAFaces (1992)[23]
 * Akin Gallery, Boston Autopia (1992)[23]
 * Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Traveling Scholars' Exhibit (1993)[23]
 * Artist's Space, New York Artists Select (1993)[23]
 * Mario Diacono Gallery, Boston Airborne/Earthbound (1994)[23]
 * Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, In Context (1994)[23]
 * Whitney Biennial, New York City (1995)
 * Forum for Contemporary Art, St. Louis Altered States (1995)[23]
 * Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Degrees of Abstraction (1995)[23]
 * Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Massachusetts Whitechapel Art Gallery, London Inside the Visible (1996)[23]
 * Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, Ireland, Projects (1997)
 * Randolph Street Gallery, Chicago T-Race (1997)
 * Basilico Fine Arts and Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York Project Painting (1997)[23]
 * Mario Diacono Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts, The Body of Painting (1997)[23]
 * De Beyerd Center for Contemporary Art, Breda, The Netherlands Postcards from Black America (1998)[23]
 * The Museum of Modern Art, New York Piecing Together the Puzzle: Recent Acquisitions (1998)[23]
 * Museo de la Ciudad de Mexico, Mexico City, Mexico, Cinco continentes y una ciudad (1998)[23]
 * Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, Texas, USA Negotiating Small Truths (1999)
 * Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, Collectors Collect Contemporary: 1990–1999 (1999)[23]
 * École nationale supérieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris, (Corps) Social (1999)[23]
 * Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas, Austin, TX, Negotiating Small Truths (1999)[23]
 * P.S. 1 Contemporary Art Center, Long Island City, NY, USA Greater New York: New Art in New York Now (2000)
 * Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York City New Acquisitions (2000)
 * The Kerlin Gallery, Dublin, KIN (2000)[23]
 * The Contemporary, Baltimore, Making Sense: Ellen Gallagher, Christian Marclay, Liliana Porter (2000)[23]
 * Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts, Harvard University, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Strength and Diversity: A Celebration of African American Artists (2000)[23]
 * The Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts, Visual Memoirs: Selected Paintings and Drawings (2000)[23]
 * Venice Biennale, Italy 50th International Art Exhibition (2003)
 * Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, USA Heart of Darkness (2006)
 * Tate Modern, London, UK Passages from London (2007)
 * Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art, Edinburgh, Artist Rooms (2009)
 * Whitney Biennial, New York City (2010)
 * Centre Pompidou, Paris, France elles@centrepompidou (2010)
 * Museum of Modern Art, Arnhem, the Netherlands Six Yards Guaranteed Dutch Design (2011)
 * Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, USA Linde Family Wing for Contemporary Art (2011)
 * Museum of Modern Art, New York, USA Print/Out (2011)

Publications[edit]
''Murmur. Orbus'' in collaboration with Edgar Cleijne. Hauser & Wirth London/Fruitmarket Gallery Edinburgh (ed.) 2005. English, 5 books holding together with magnet, 990 pages. With "Blizzard of White" (2003, 55 min loop, 16 mm). ISBN 3039390333

Collections[edit]
Gallagher's work is held in many permanent collections including the Addison Gallery of American Art, Goetz Collection, Hamburger Bahnhof, Studio Museum in Harlem, Walker Art Center, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Moderna Museet, Sammlung Goetz and the Centre Georges Pompidou.[4][18][24][25][26]

Specific works include:


 * Doll's Eyes, 1992, Rose Art Museum, Waltham, MA
 * Afro Mountain, 1994, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY
 * Tally, 1994, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MA
 * Untitled, 1995, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA
 * Delirious Hem, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY
 * Host, 1996, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA
 * Paper Cup (painting), 1996, Tate Modern, London
 * Teeth Tracks, 1996, The Broad, Los Angeles, CA
 * Untitled, 1996, The Broad, Los Angeles, CA
 * Untitled, 1997, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, CA
 * Untitled, 1998, National Galleries of Scotland
 * Untitled, 1999, Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL
 * Blubber, 2000, Princeton University Art Museum, Princeton NJ[27]
 * They Could Still Serve, 2001, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY
 * Bouffant Pride, 2003, Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH[28]
 * Water Ecstatic, 2003, Saint Louis Art Museum, St. Louis, MO
 * Duke, 2004, Fogg Museum, Cambridge, MA
 * DeLuxe, 2004–2005, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA[29]
 * Bird in Hand, 2006, Tate Modern, London, England

Further reading[edit]

 * Butler, Cornelia, Modern Women: Women Artists at The Museum of Modern Art, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2010. OCLC 501397424
 * Barson, Tanya, Gorschlüter, Peter (eds.), Afro Modern: Journeys Through the Black Atlantic, London: Tate Publishing, 2010.
 * Ellen Gallagher. Coral Cities, London: Tate Publishing, 2007.
 * Gallagher, Ellen, Cleijne, Edgar, Murmur. Water Ecstatic, Kabuki, Blizzard of White, Super Boo, Monster, in: Heart of Darkness, New York NY: Walker Art Centre, 2006. pp. 81–104, ill.
 * Riemschneider, Burkhard & Uta Grosenick. Art Now. Cologne: Taschen, 2002.
 * De Zegher, Catherine, Jeff Fleming & Robin D.G. Kelley. Preserve. New York: D.A.P., 2002.
 * Grosenick, Uta. Women Artists. Cologne: Taschen, 2001. pp. 144–149.
 * Coleman, Beth. Ellen Gallagher: Blubber. New York: Gagosian Gallery, 2001.
 * Kertess, Klaus, John Ashbery, Gerald M. Edelman et al. 1995 Biennial Exhibition. New York: Whitney Museum of American Art / Harry N. Abrams, 1995.
 * Suzanne P. Hudson. ‘1000 Words: Ellen Gallagher’. ArtForum, vol.42, no.8, April 2004, pp. 128–31.
 * Chan, Suzanna. "Astonishing Marine Living: Ellen Gallagher's Ichthyosaurus at the Freud Museum," in G. Pollock (ed.) Visual Politics of Psychoanalysis, London: I.B.Tauris, 2013. ISBN 978-1-78076-316-3
 * Tate, Greg; Robert Storr; Jill Medvedow. "Ellen Gallagher" Institute of Contemporary Art in association with D.A.P./Distributed Art Publishers, Inc. 2001. ISBN 1-891024-31-0

1). "Ellen Gallagher, Gagosian Gallery, New York" NKA. Retrieved March 28, 2019.

-Gallagher was featured on the cover of the Magazine

-Gallagher's career boomed in 1995 and has had multiple solo exhibits prior to her Gagosian showing at Mary Boone (New York) and Anthony D'Offay (London)

-Gallager's artwork is generally thought to depict stereotypical images of black people --> popular caricatures from the pa st

-Gallagher's artwork is minimalistic and does not contain much "content", more conceptual

-Her work sparks debate in the art world, are her images representing stereotypical images of black people offensive or do they create powerful images?

-Gallagher's paintings are big and "luscious", pastes notebook paper on her canvas to create texture, and draws on them

-She uses symbolism on her paintings (abstracted lips, eyeballs, and minstrel iconography)

-Gallagher creates space within her abstract paintings, she uses geometric shapes as well

2). https://gagosian.com/artists/ellen-gallagher/ -Gallagher works with media, such as drawings, collages, films, paintings, and drawings

-She uses racially charged images and abstractions to contribute her ideas to black history in America

-Gallagher typically uses found historical images

-Gallagher is inspired by the "New Negro" movement as well as modernist abstraction

-Gallagher was born in Providence, Rhode Island in 1965

-She attended Oberlin College from 1982-1984, went to School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston in 1992

-Gallagher currently lives in New York City and Rotterdam, the Netherlands

3). " 'Alive...again.' Unmoored in the Aquafuture of Ellen Gallagher's Watery Ecstatic", Suzanna Chen. WSQ: Women's Studies Quarterly . Retrieved March 28, 2019.

-In her series, Watery Ecstatic, Gallagher depicts marine life through an "Afrofuturist" aesthetic. Water Ecstatic consists of mixed media works, sculptures, and films

-She depicts the horrors African women faced in history by depicting them as aquatic beings - possibly to show their immortality and by doing so, providing justice

-In this series, Gallagher dismantles gender and racial binaries through the depiction of mythical beings

-The author, Suzanna Chen, explores three works that supposedly erase gender and race binaries

-Gallagher depicts forms through an aquatic aesthetic, an especially unique way of portraying identity

-In the early 90s, Mark Dery, a cultural critic, addressed "Afrofuturism" to describe the way black artists were portraying black identity. African American identity was depicted through the usage of appropriated technological images and "cyborg futurity"

-"Afro" is a way to unify the repressed. Chen describes Afrofuturism as a political and cultural "formation" rather than a racial identity.

-Female bodies were portrayed as aquatic beings to go against the typical historical animalization of the black female body

4). "Sniffing Elephant Bones: The Poetics of Race in the Art of Ellen Gallagher", Judith Wilson. The Johns Hopkins University Press. Retrieved March 28, 2019.

-Gallagher has been known to work with the ideas of image and body

-Gallagher uses elements of poetry and pop culture in her work

-One of Gallagher's first exhibitions showed at the Dark Room in 1989, which is a group of African American writers based in New England

-Gallagher likes working with troubling imagery, such as minstrelsy

-Gallagher uses many golden tones to depict our "color-coded society"

-Her paintings work with the material but also work with cultural, social, and political implications

-Gallagher is known to make "risky" art

5). "Ellen Gallagher: Don't Axe Me, New Museum, New York", Ariella Budick, Financial Times.

-Gallagher's exhibition at the New Museum was considered "retrospective"

-Gallagher creates many mixed work. Sometimes she cuts out letters to create a code in her work

-Her newer work tends to be cryptic. Her work was critiqued to be too obviously racial. However, she started creating work that was so tied in with racial politics using abstraction. Explicit messages were no longer readily seen.

-She cut out very stereotypical and racist images to challenge her viewers

= Article Evaluation = 1).Ellen Gallagher

--> Plan on adding onto Work section

Work[edit]
Gallagher's influences include the paintings of Agnes Martin and the repetitive writings of Gertrude Stein. Some of Gallagher's work involves repetitively modifying advertising found in African American focused publications such as Ebony, Sepia, and Our World. Her most famous pieces are her grid-like collages of magazines grouped together into larger pieces. Examples of these are eXelento(2004), Afrylic (2004), and DeLuxe (2005). Each of these works contains as many as or more than 60 prints employing techniques of photogravure, spit-bite, collage, cutting, scratching, silkscreen, offset lithography and hand-building.

Some of Gallagher's early influences while attending the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston were the Darkroom Collective, a group of poets living and working out of Inman Square in Cambridge, MA and would go on to become the art coordinator of the collective. Some other influences at the Museum School were Susan Denker, Ann Hamilton, Kiki Smith and Laylah Ali.

Themes related to race are often evident in Gallagher's work, sometimes using pictographs, symbols, codes and repetitions. "Sambo lips" and "bug eyes," references to the Black minstrel shows, are often scattered throughout Gallagher's works. Certain characters are also used repeatedly, such as the image of the nurse or the "Pegleg" character that sometimes populate her page's iconography. Some of her pieces may explicitly reference the issue of race while also having a more subtle undercurrent related to race. She combines formality (grid lines, ruled paper) with the racial stereotypes to depict the "ordering principles" society imposes.

Her media includes paintings, works on paper, film and video. She has made innovative use of materials, such as creating a unique variation on scrimshaw by carving images into the surface of thick sheets of watercolor paper and drawing with ink, watercolor and pencil. These works depict sea creatures, of the mythical undersea world of Drexciya, which were the progeny of slaves who had drowned. This mythology had been conceived by a musical duo of that name, from Detroit. Gallagher commented upon the process of creating these pieces: "The way that these drawings are made is my version of scrimshaw, the carving into bone that sailors did when they were out whaling. I imagine them in this overwhelming, scary expanse of sea where this kind of cutting would give a focus, a sense of being in control of something." In some of her early pieces, she painted and drew on sheets of penmanship paper (ruled paper used for handwriting practice) she had pasted onto canvas. Her choice of penmanship paper is significant, in an interview with Jessica Morgan, she says "the sense of a neutral surface that can accommodate any mark seems an ideal way of communicating freedom,"which is described by her as "idiosyncratic" and "inscrutable".

In 1995, Gallagher's work was exhibited at the Whitney Biennial and the Venice Biennale in 2003. Artist Chuck Close created a 2009 tapestry portrait of Gallagher.Gallagher is represented by Gagosian Gallery (New York) and Hauser & Wirth (London). She is based in the United States (New York City) and the Netherlands (Rotterdam).

2). Category:African-American painters

3). Category:African-American contemporary artists