Black Is The Queen of Color - A Group Exhibition

Black Is The Queen of Color - A Group Exhibition

554 Guadalupe Street Santa Fe, NM 87501, USA Friday, May 1, 2020–Saturday, May 30, 2020

 Each year, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art brings together a single-color exhibition featuring works of art exploring multiple facets of one color. For 2020 – that color is the achromatic black.

grace by pard morrison

Pard Morrison

Grace, 2020

Price on Request

black horizon by liane nouri

Liane Nouri

Black Horizon, 2020

Price on Request

untitled wvz 4/92/112 (big triangle) by michael post

Michael Post

Untitled WVZ 4/92/112 (Big Triangle), 1992

Price on Request

untitled by michael rouillard

Michael Rouillard

Untitled, 2019

Price on Request

10, 102 by robert sagerman

Robert Sagerman

10, 102, 2015

Price on Request

untitled (white mark/black/vertical 3) by paul sarkisian

Paul Sarkisian

Untitled (white mark/black/vertical 3), 1994

Price on Request

four square series by david simpson

David Simpson

Four Square Series, 1980

Sold

thread painting 2020-1 by hadi tabatabai

Hadi Tabatabai

Thread Painting 2020-1, 2020

Price on Request

untitled (wvz 04/19/690) by heiner thiel

Heiner Thiel

Untitled (WVZ 04/19/690), 2019

Sold

carbon grey by jeremy thomas

Jeremy Thomas

Carbon Grey, 2020

Sold

painting of black by clark walding

Clark Walding

Painting of Black, 2002

Price on Request

black clasp by tom waldron

Tom Waldron

Black Clasp, 2017

Price on Request

Temporarily by appointment only


Each year, Charlotte Jackson Fine Art brings together a single-color exhibition featuring works of art exploring multiple facets of one color. For 2020 – that color is the achromatic black.    

Nix. A raven perched in a pine. Your shadow, walking beside you on a sunny day. Black is freighted with associations, differing among cultures. From death, mourning, witchcraft, and evil, to power and authority, from fertility or secrets, to fashionable elegance. Black was one of the first colors used in art, found in Neolithic cave paintings, the pigment created from charcoal.    

This one-color exhibition is inspired by a quote by artist Max Cole, who notes that black absorbs the spectrum of light, rather than reflecting it and so, “…exists at the edge of perception and opens the door to the mystery of the unknown.” With works in a wide variety of mediums by a diverse range of artists, including: Max Cole, Constance DeJong, Jeremy Thomas, William Metcalf, Michael Rouillard, Scot Heywood, Liane Nouri, Alan Graham, Tom Waldron, Clark Walding, Hadi Tabatabai and Michael Post – Black is the Queen of Color will entrance viewers with its subtle grace and infinite possibility.