Robert Motherwell, Stuart Davis, Ibram Lassaw, Anna Walinska
Twentieth Century Paintings and Drawings, Stuart Davis to Robert Motherwell and Open Space Densities: Abstract Sculptures by Ibram Lassaw
January 17, 2024 - February 23, 2024
Graham Shay presents two complementary exhibitions, on view together in our main Gallery showroom, for the 2024 edition of Master Drawings New York.
The surreal, molten metal sculptures by Ibram Lassaw, spanning a period from 1950 through 1985, draw the viewer through and within. On the walls, the second part is a selection of modernist paintings, watercolors, collage, and drawings by mid-century artists including Robert Motherwell, Stuart Davis, Mercedes Matter, Anna Walinska, Richard Serra, Willem de Kooning, Perle Fine, Louise Nevelson, Jimmy Ernst, Mary Abbott, and Hans Hofmann.
Highlights from the paintings portion are a 1979 oil on paper sketch Drunk With Turpentine, the final study for Motherwell’s finished painting White Sanctuary, 1981. Similarly, included amongst three Stuart Davis drawings, is a sketch for his painting, Flags, 1931. The New York modernist Anna Walinska is represented by a powerful black and white oil painting, Tokyo Landscape, 1957, and a Shan paper collage Figures, 1961. Canadian Jean-Paul Riopelle’s colorful expressionist Landscape, circa 1958, is another highlight.
The sculptor Ibram Lassaw is represented by seven unique works. The artist was among the earliest American sculptors to work in an abstract style, beginning in 1933. Lassaw was a charter member of the The Clay Club, 1934 (now the Sculpture Center) and American Abstract Artists, 1937, and exhibited at both annuals. Further exhibitions were held at the Whitney Museum of American Art, 1951, Kootz Gallery, New York, 1952-1958. The Museum of Modern Art included Lassaw in several exhibitions, including the influential Twelve Americans, 1956. Other institutions that have featured Ibram Lassaw include The Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, New York, 1973, Guild Hall Museum, East Hampton, New York, 1988, and Figge Art Museum, Davenport, Iowa, 2023.
Throughout his career the artist made open space a primary material in his work. Lassaw’s approach is both surrealist and abstract expressionist, and molten metal is an ideal medium for the spontaneous image he sought. His method is action sculpture, the image drawn from the metal itself: a wire core overlayed with globs of molten bronze or other alloys. The process is analogous to drawing in space, not as fluent as pen or brush, but still spontaneous. Changing from one alloy to another in the welding process achieves a myriad of surfaces, a variety of colors, textures. The process and materials are varied, a mixture of metals, brass, nickel-silver, stainless steel, bronze, iron, manganese, silicon and tin. Color was prized and created by treating the metals with salts, acids and alkalis, achieving greens, blues and other colors.