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Irving Petlin

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Nationality
  
American

Education
  
Movement
  
Books
  
Irving Petlin: Pastelli

Name
  
Irving Petlin

Known for
  
Role
  
Artist


Irving Petlin Irving Petlin Artists Kent Fine Art

Born
  
December 17, 1934
Chicago, IL, United States

Awards
  
Guggenheim Fellowship for Creative Arts, US & Canada

Irving petlin at kent 2010 mov


Irving Petlin (born December 17, 1934 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American artist and painter renowned for his mastery of the pastel medium and collaborations with other artists (including Mark di Suvero and Leon Golub) and for his work in the "series form" in which he uses the raw material of pastel, oil paint and unprimed linen, and finds inspiration in the work of writers and poets including Primo Levi, Bruno Schulz, Paul Celan, Michael Palmer and Edmond Jabès.

Irving Petlin Irving Petlin Looks Back on a Life of Painting artnet News

Petlin attended the Art Institute of Chicago from 1953-1956 where he received his BFA during the height of the Chicago Imagist movement. At a critical juncture Petlin attended Yale to study under Josef Albers, subsequently earning his MFA in 1960. In 1964, his work was shown at the Hanover Gallery in London and Galerie du Dragon in Paris, where he influenced the Nouvelle figuration movement. That same year, Petlin was invited to teach at UCLA as a visiting artist, along with artists Richard Diebenkorn and Llyn Foulkes.

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While in California, he was a principal organizer of the "Artist’s Protest movement against the war in Vietnam." In open meetings held at the Dwan Gallery, of which John Weber is the director, he founded the Artists’ Protest Committee. In 1966, Petlin planned the Peace Tower with help of Mark di Suvero, as well as Philip Lieder, Craig Kauffman, Larry Bell, Walter Hopps, Rolf Nelson, Judy Chicago, Lloyd Hamrol, Hardy Hanson, Eric Orr, Tanya Nuefeld, and others. “The Artists’ Call” for the tower is published in four languages, and works arrive from all over the world to be attached to it. The finished tower, was dedicated by Susan Sontag and untimately attacked overnight. The following year, in 1965, Petlin had his first major one-man exhibition held at the Palais des Beaux Arts in Brussels. Shortly thereafter, he returned to New York with his family and moved into an apartment on West 11th Street. At this time, his growing commitment to the American milieu resulted in the completion of the painting The Burning of Los Angeles. During this period, Petlin is a founder and a participant in Artists and Writers Against the War in Vietnam, the Art Workers Coalition, the Art Strike, the Moratorium, the Venice Biennale.

Irving Petlin Irving Petlin The High Plants at 1stdibs

Since the 1960s, when he became one of the founding members of "Artists and Writers Against the War in Vietnam," Petlin has been a leader in artists' political activism. He created the iconic anti-Vietnam War poster And babies in 1969. Petlin has continued his militant interventions after the 1960s through such activities as his participation in the "Artists' Call Against the U.S. Intervention in Central America". Petlin has taught at the University of California, Los Angeles, the Cooper Union in New York, as well as the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts in Philadelphia. He currently resides in Paris, New York and Martha's Vineyard, Massachusetts.

Irving Petlin mediastore2magnumphotoscomCoreXDocMAGMediaTR

Irving Petlin Irving Petlin A Retrospective Selected Works Richard

Irving Petlin Irving Petlin Artists Kent Fine Art

Irving Petlin Irving Petlin AMERICAN b 1934 Giotto39s Advice

References

Irving Petlin Wikipedia