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Elizabeth Murray (artist)

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Nationality
  
American

Spouse
  
Bob Holman (m. ?–2007)

Role
  
Painter

Name
  
Elizabeth Murray

Known for
  

Elizabeth Murray (artist) Pace Gallery Elizabeth Murray

Born
  
September 6, 1940 (
1940-09-06
)

Education
  
School of the Art Institute of Chicago.Mills College.

Died
  
August 12, 2007, New York, United States

Artwork
  
Do the Dance, Children Meeting, Yikes, Painters Progress, Dis Pair, Beam, More than You Know, Southern California

Movies
  
Art City #1: Making It In Manhattan

Children
  
Sophia Holman, Dakota Sunseri Holman, Daisy Murray Holman

Similar People
  
Bob Holman, Philip Guston, Sophia Holman, Robert Ellsberg

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Elizabeth Murray (September 6, 1940 – August 12, 2007) was an American painter, printmaker and draughtsman. Her works are in many major public collections, including those of the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Carnegie Museum of Art, and the Wadsworth Atheneum.

Contents

Elizabeth Murray (artist) Elizabeth Murray ART21 Magazine

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Life and work

Elizabeth Murray (artist) Weekly Roundup ART21 Magazine

Elizabeth Murray was born in Chicago, Illinois, United States. Murray graduated from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1958-1962. She earned her Master of Fine Arts degree from Mills College in 1964. As a student, she was influenced by painters ranging from Cézanne to Robert Rauschenberg and Jasper Johns.

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In 1967, Murray moved to New York City, and first exhibited in 1971 in the Whitney Museum of American Art Annual Exhibition. One of her first mature works included "Children Meeting," 1978 (now in the permanent collection of the Whitney Museum), an oil on canvas painting evoking human characteristics, personalities, or pure feeling through an interaction of non-figurative shapes, colour and lines. She is particularly noted for her shaped canvas paintings.

Elizabeth Murray (artist) Awards College Art Association CAA Advancing the

She was elected a Fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 1998. In 1999, Murray was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship. This grant led directly to opening of the Bowery Poetry Club, a Lower East Side performance arts venue run by her husband, Bob Holman.

Elizabeth Murray (artist) Elizabeth Murray MONTI DA LEGARE MY ART COLLECTION

In 2006, her 40-year career was honored at New York City's Museum of Modern Art (MoMA). The retrospective was widely praised, with The New York Times noting that by the end of the exhibition, "You're left with the sense of an artist in the flush of her authority and still digging deep." As of 2008, Murray was only one of five female artists to have had a retrospective at the MoMA—the other four are Louise Bourgeois (in 1982), Lee Krasner (in 1984), Helen Frankenthaler (in 1989), and Lee Bontecou (in 2004).

Elizabeth Murray (artist) Elizabeth Murray joins Art Dept

In 2007, Murray died of lung cancer. In her obituary, The New York Times wrote that Murray "reshaped Modernist abstraction into a high-spirited, cartoon-based, language of form whose subjects included domestic life, relationships and the nature of painting itself..." The Bowery Poetry Club held a Praise Day in her honor on August 30, 2007, with artists Brice Marden and Joel Shapiro, writers Jessica Hagedorn and Patricia Spears Jones, and choreographers Elizabeth Streb and Yoshiko Chuma among the attendees; Artforum described the event as "a blend of the poignant and the comic that threatened to bring it closer to a Saturday Night Live skit shredding avant-garde performance practice than an actual art-world remembrance." A second private memorial was held at the Museum of Modern Art later that fall. Murray was survived by her husband, Bob Holman, and three children: daughters Sophia Murray Holman and Daisy Murray Holman, and son Dakota Sunseri.

Film

Everybody Knows...Elizabeth Murray, a film exploring Murray's life and work, premiered at the Tribeca Film Festival in 2016.

Art and feminism

"Murray’s curatorial gesture would seem to have constituted a partial change of heart from her . . . previously self-contained feminism. It is important, though that her strategy for convincing was exhibiting––bringing images out of the shadows . . . As with the Abstract Expressionist record, so with MoMA, where far more works by women sit in storage than are on display." -

After Murray's death, the A G Foundation, Columbia University, and the Archives of American Art established the “Elizabeth Murray Oral History of Women in the Visual Arts Project,” to honor her memory. "It seems so right to honor Elizabeth Murray by archiving the lives, the thoughts, the dreams and goals of other women who—like herself—persisted in the visual arts, extending and enriching the world through their work," said the A G Foundation's Agnes Gund.

References

Elizabeth Murray (artist) Wikipedia