The Ribbon Paintings (1971-1976)

The Ribbon Paintings (1971-1976)

530 W. 24th Street New York, NY 10011, USA Thursday, November 18, 2021–Thursday, December 23, 2021

 Berry Campbell Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of paintings by Stanley Boxer (1926-2000). This special exhibition will focus on Stanley Boxer’s Ribbon paintings made between 1971 and 1976.

come and see the sunset by stanley boxer

Stanley Boxer

Come and See the Sunset, 1972

Price on Request

lafayette cast by stanley boxer

Stanley Boxer

Lafayette Cast, 1972

Price on Request

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
BERRY CAMPBELL GALLERY PRESENTS STANLEY BOXER: THE RIBBON PAINTINGS (1971-1976)   

NEW YORK, NEW YORK, November 5, 2021 – Berry Campbell Gallery is pleased to announce a solo exhibition of paintings by Stanley Boxer (1926-2000). This special exhibition will focus on Stanley Boxer’s Ribbon paintings made between 1971 and 1976.   

Stanley Boxer: The Ribbon Paintings (1971-1976) will open with a reception on Thursday, November 18, 2021 from 6 to 8 pm. The exhibition continues through December 23, 2021. Gallery hours are Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm or by appointment.
 

STANLEY BOXER: THE RIBBON PAINTINGS
For Stanley Boxer (1926–2000), art making was a way of life. Throughout his career, he wrestled with the natural propensities of media and materials and the physical and historical limitations imposed by artistic forms. He was equally inventive in painting, sculpture, and drawing, striving in each for directness of expression. It was important to Boxer to maintain a strict working routine; he felt the repetition of this practice was “a lubricant,” enabling him to “drift past notions of the moment,” himself, and his self-distrust to see what would happen and make that which “doesn’t exist in physical evidence.” He understood art as a second nature, a creation separate from what a work represented, while it possessed the authority of lived experience. For this reason, he indulged his feelings of being in the world in his art without thinking of his work as being predominantly self-expressive. In this respect, his oeuvre has elements of Abstract Expressionist gut emotion and Post-Painterly detachment without belonging to either camp. Boxer’s friend, the art writer Carl Belz associated his approach with that of the writer Gustave Flaubert who felt that “an author in his book must be like God in the universe, present everywhere and visible nowhere.” “Amazed and overwhelmed” by Boxer’s art, Belz commented in a memorial article that creating art for Boxer constituted nothing less “than the making of a world, a construct as vast and complex, as challenging and rewarding, as orderly and chaotic, as public and private, as lived experience.”   The present exhibition at Berry Campbell presents the Ribbon paintings created by Boxer in the first half of the 1970s. These works exemplify his feeling that the open-ended freedom unleashed by creativity was a burden for the “modern” artist, which artists were required to accept while preventing its misuse by being self-challenging, constraining open-endedness. As Boxer stated in a 1992 interview with Belz: “Modern art is nebulous, it’s a perception, and it’s somewhat akin to democracy itself, its strength and its power lie in its resilience to abuse.” Like other phases of his career, the Ribbon paintings were a natural evolution for Boxer in his art. In 1969 and 1970, he created works in which he interwove broad, flat strips of primed cloth glued to his canvases with blocks of color stained into the canvas itself. He used subtle squiggles and doodles in paint or lead pencil for a decorative element, evoking his admiration for Rococo works by artists such Gainsborough and Watteau. The results, producing the effect of pure painting despite his collage method, were viewed as ethereal and “Japanese” in spirit, referencing landscapes without providing landscape details.   In 1971, a change occurred in Boxer’s art as he replaced collages that looked like paintings with pure paintings with collage-like aspects. He continued a landscape sensibility but with a new introspective feeling derived from two months in late 1970 when, due to illness, he was confined to Veteran’s Hospital in New York, and his universe narrowed. His only view of the world was that from his window facing the East River. As a result, his works assumed a new topographic and lyrical aspect. In them, the earlier doodles morphed into ribbon-like arcs and bands that he integrated into designs with little tonal variation, while they provided contrasting hues. In Vaheveningblush, 1971, the Vah in the title refers to the hospital. The work, in a narrow vertical format accentuated by a wavering ribbon-like shape, conflates suggestions of upward urban and the aerial river views, suffused in the luminous dusk unique to large cities. It was in this period that Boxer adopted poetically sensuous run-on titles, revealing that his images are meant to be experiential not specific. In Warmfield, 1971, the twisting and tapering of ribbons respond to the canvas edges, demonstrating Boxer’s view that each work of art should be treated as a world of its own, with its own rules and limits, not those chosen by the artist. Here the ribbons conform agreeably to their confined space. Wintergolden, 1971, is a small yet powerful image with a rising orb of Venetian red touching a blue-green horizon line while the flatness of the surface is intact.   Boxer first exhibited his work at Tibor de Nagy Gallery in New York in 1971. His annual solo shows from 1971 to 1975 at the gallery coincided with the years he created the Ribbon paintings, receiving many favorable reviews. Grace Glueck reviewed his 1972 show for the New York Times, calling the works on view “quiet, very rewarding paintings” in poetic moods. In works of 1972, Boxer began integrating the canvas prime into his images, but using exposed areas as color rather than background, maintaining figure/ground unity. At the same time, the ribbons became at times more frayed and calligraphic, as in Rainnights, 1973, in which the bristling elements seem to emanate from within the canvas, and Sunbraid, 1973, in which the ribbon’s shape is more volatile and less secure in its directional movement. In Sultryfrost, 1973, the linear shapes enter the space from opposing directions as if of their own accord, forcing Boxer to contain their movement. Of his 1973 show, James Mellow wrote in the New York Times: “Large, generous, quasi-geometric forms fill out the squarish formats of Mr. Boxer’s handsome abstractions. The paint handling is deft with the pigment stained and brushed into linen grounds. The color is beautiful and evocative....In a highly personal way, the artist combines the sense or ‘feel’ of nature with the strictly abstract forms of the painting. A fine show.”   Boxer’s surfaces turned more tactile, gestural, and layered in 1974, as he relinquished flat, single colors for fields of shifting, volatile color. One critic related the spectralizing nature of his surfaces to the work of Bonnard. In Hushofnoon, 1974, he again contained the image within a closed space by linear drawing that forms an inner frame. Within the work, ribbons bloat and contract in response to the compression that results. In these paintings, the lyrical mood gives way to more electric, pressured, and vehement feelings. Karen Wilkin observed in 1982 how “the flame-like tones of thickly stroked color” in these works “seemed at once spontaneous and willed. Each ‘ribbon’ seemed to have made its own shape, as though a particular color had meandered across the canvas, but at the same time, we were made acutely aware that this trail of color was the result of a series of repeated, considered gestures which served to spread pigment across the canvas.”   In 1975, the ribbons erupted and began to merge with the surface tactility around them. Wilkin described Boxer’s works as “at once lyrical and brutal, aggressively physical and ineffably elusive.... They depend equally upon laboriously stroked thick oil paint and upon disembodied blushes of color whose substance vanishes as you look.” This description is apt for Roseflakedairabout, 1975, in which the lightly inflected tints are intruded upon by aggressive harsher-toned underlayers that push through the surface. In Arts, Richard Lorber stated that Boxer’s “gestural romanticism” harked back, “with his sweeping trowlings, to Clyfford Still, but with far subtler dissonances of color.” The works of this period include black paintings with the intensity of molten lava, such as Havocpockednights, 1975. Lorber called such works primordial, with a “Blakeian feel for unifying rhythms.” Jeanne Siegel took note of Boxer’s “marvelous black paintings,” commenting that these works “are never really black but blue black or brown black with only a light ribbon-like form to relieve the somber tone.”   By 1976, the ribbons became fully suffused into allover designs. As Wilkin observed: “It’s as though the continuous expanse of thick pigment which surrounded the tongues of color in the ribbon pictures had swallowed them and been tinged by them.” Boxer’s Ribbon paintings are the story of an artist engaged in a living and passionate mediation between existential limitlessness and human discipline. His process between 1971 and 1976 allowed him eventually to loosen the latter, freeing the brutality, but without giving in to it. Throughout the rest of his career, he would continue to face inner and outer directional forces with great integrity. —Lisa. N. Peters, Ph.D.   

ABOUT THE GALLERY Christine Berry and Martha Campbell have many parallels in their backgrounds and interests. Both studied art history in college, began their careers in the museum world, and later worked together at a major gallery in midtown Manhattan. Most importantly, however, Berry and Campbell share a curatorial vision.   Both art dealers have developed a strong emphasis on research and networking with artists and scholars. They decided to work together, opening Berry Campbell Gallery in 2013 in the heart of New York's Chelsea art district, at 530 West 24th Street on the ground floor. In 2015, the gallery expanded, doubling its size with an additional 2,000 square feet of exhibition space.
Highlighting a selection of postwar and contemporary artists, the gallery fulfills an important gap in the art world, revealing a depth within American modernism that is just beginning to be understood, encompassing the many artists who were left behind due to race, gender, or geography-beyond such legendary figures as Pollock and de Kooning. Since its inception, the gallery has been especially instrumental in giving women artists long overdue consideration, an effort that museums have only just begun to take up, such as in the 2016 traveling exhibition, Women of Abstract Expressionism, curated by University of Denver professor Gwen F. Chanzit. This show featured work by Perle Fine and Judith Godwin, both represented by Berry Campbell, along with that of Helen Frankenthaler, Lee Krasner, and Joan Mitchell. In 2019, Berry Campbell's exhibition, Yvonne Thomas: Windows and Variations (Paintings 1963 - 1965) was reviewed by Roberta Smith for the New York Times, in which Smith wrote that Thomas, "... kept her hand in, adding a fresh directness of touch, and the results give her a place in the still-emerging saga of postwar American abstraction."   In addition to Perle Fine, Judith Godwin, and Yvonne Thomas, artists whose work is represented by the gallery include Edward Avedisian, Walter Darby Bannard, Stanley Boxer, Frederick J. Brown, Lilian Thomas Burwell, Nanette Carter, Dan Christensen, Eric Dever, Lynne Mapp Drexler, John Goodyear, Ken Greenleaf, Raymond Hendler, Mary Dill Henry, Ida Kohlmeyer, Jill Nathanson, John Opper, Elizabeth Osborne, Stephen Pace, Charlotte Park, William Perehudoff, Ann Purcell, Mike Solomon, Syd Solomon, Albert Stadler, Susan Vecsey, James Walsh, Joyce Weinstein, Frank Wimberley, Larry Zox, and Edward Zutrau. The gallery has helped promote many of these artists' careers in museum shows including that of Bannard at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami (2018-19); Syd Solomon, in a traveling museum show which culminates at the John and Mable Ringling Museum in Sarasota and has been extended through 2021; Stephen Pace at The McCutchan Art Center/Pace Galleries at the University of Southern Indiana (2018) and at the Provincetown Art Association and Museum (2019); Vecsey and Mike Solomon at the Greenville County Museum of Art, South Carolina (2017 and 2019, respectively); and Eric Dever at the Suffolk Community College, Riverhead, New York (2020). In an April 3, 2020 New York Times review of Berry Campbell's exhibition of Ida Kohlmeyer's Cloistered paintings, Roberta Smith stated: “These paintings stunningly sum up a moment when Minimalism was giving way to or being complicated by something more emotionally challenging and implicitly feminine and feminist. They could hang in any museum.”   Collaboration is an important aspect of the gallery. With the widened inquiries and understandings that have resulted from their ongoing discussions about the art world canon, the dealers feel a continual sense of excitement in the discoveries of artists and research still to be made.   Berry Campbell is located in the heart of the Chelsea Art District at 530 West 24th Street, Ground Floor, New York, NY 10011. For further information, contact us at 212.924.2178, [email protected] or www.berrycampbell.com.