Robert Kipniss (American, born )

Timeline

1931
Born in New York City
1947
Art Students League, New York City
1948–1950
Wittenberg University, Springfield, Ohio; University of Iowa, Iowa City
1952
BA English Literature
1954
Master of Fine Arts in Painting and Art History
1988
Speicher-Hassam Purchase Award, American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters, New York City
1998
Elected to the Royal Society of Painter Printmakers, London, U.K.
1998
Silvermine Guilds 22nd National Print Biennial, CT, Juror’s Award
1998
Daniel Serra-Badue Memorial Award, Audubon Artists, New York City
1999
The Cannon Prize, National Academy of Design, New York City
1999
The Rembrandt Graphics Award, The Boston Printmakers
Robert Kipniss began his career writing poetry and fiction, later focusing on oil paintings and monochrome mezzotint prints depicting bare wintertime trees, interiors, still lifes, and countryside scenes with modest, solitary houses. Born to artistic parents, Kipniss first studied at New York’s Art Students League before completing an MFA in painting and art history at the University of Iowa in 1954. He had his first solo exhibition at Joe Gans Gallery in New York in 1951, and his moody scenes capturing atmospheric moments have since been included in international solo and group shows. Though Kipniss began making the mezzotints for which he is best known in the 1960s, it wasn’t until the early 90s that he worked with the medium more exclusively with works such as Hidden trees (2018). He has also painted in oils throughout his career, and worked in stone lithography. His compositions are devoid of people and strive to harmoniously balance vertical and horizontal elements, exploring the effects of light on branches and fields in a palette of grays and earth tones.