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Howard Warshaw: Looking In/Drawing Out
On Exhibit in our Mayhew Gallery
May 1, 2008 through June 29, 2008
E-Catalog
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Reception
SATURDAY, MAY 1
FROM 5 - 7:30PM
7 EAST ANAPAMU STREET, SANTA BARBARA, CA
A Few Words About This Exhibit
Born in 1920 in Manhattan and trained at the Pratt
Institute, the National Academy, the Art Students League
of New York and Columbia, Howard Warshaw developed
into a powerful American artist at an early age.
At just twenty-five years old, Warshaw
exhibited at the famous Julien Levy
Gallery in New York as well as the 1945
Whitney Annual. This auspicious launch
led to an active, lifelong exhibition
schedule with dealers Julien Levy and
Jacques Seligmann in New York and
Felix Landau, Esther Bear, and Frank
Perls in California. He also exhibited at
the National Academy, LACMA, the De
Young, and the Santa Barbara Museum
of Art, among many others. For a time,
he and artists like Rico Lebrun (1900-
1964) and William Brice (1921-2008)
helped shape the American avant-garde from the wilds
of Southern California.
Howard Warshaw’s first paintings are surreal featuring
precise draftsmanship, a rare sense for shape, and a
restricted palette. These works show the strong influence
of neo-romantic painter Eugene Berman (1899-1972).
His later works would explore and refine the expressive
lines and ambiguous forms of Rico Lebrun.
This overlapping of elusory forms coalesced into
a distinctive style of cubism that has been termed
“organic cubism.” If this movement originated with
Lebrun, it found its most elegant expression in the work
of Warshaw, who was able to advance
the idea for a decade longer.
Among Warshaw’s most significant
contributions to American art was his
development of a unique and important
language of drawing. In the lines of his
best drawings, one can read movement,
volume, weight, the emotional tenor
of the artist and subject, the scientific
knowledge of the time, and the artist’s
philosophy. As a professor at UCSB
from 1957 until his death in 1977,
Howard Warshaw helped generations
of artists to see more deeply and to
draw more beautifully.
This exhibit is composed of many pieces acquired from
Tajan, the premier Parisian auction house, as well as
from the Estate of the Artist; many have been widely
exhibited and few have been seen in decades. Sullivan
Goss hopes to lend context to the current reassessment
of the mid-century’s greatest artists. Surely, Howard
Warshaw is one of them.
- Jeremy Tessmer, Gallery Director
About the artist
To learn more about this artist, click here.
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