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Charles Hinman
(
American
, born 1932)
Charles Hinman
Rectangle Series 8,
2022
Price on Request
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Biography
Timeline
Exhibitions
Public Collections
Literature
Timeline
1932
Born: Syracuse, NY
1951 - 1955
Augusta Hazzard Fellowship, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY, USA
1955 - 1966
Studied at the Art Students League, New York, NY
First Prize, Flint Institute Invitational, Flint, MI
1955
B.F.A., Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY
Hiram Gee Award, Syracuse University, Syracuse, NY
1965
Co-winner, First Prize, Museum of Contemporary Art, Nagoaka, Japan
1966
First Prize, Flint Institute Invitational, Flint, MI, USA
1967
Honorable Mention, International Prize Torcuato de Tella, Buenos Aires, Argentina
1980
Grant, National Endowment of the Arts, Washington, DC
1995
Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, New York, NY
1996
Adolph & Esther Gottlieb Foundation Grant, New York, NY
1997
Member, American Abstract Artists
2001
Richard Florsheim Foundation Grant
2007
Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, New York, NY
2008
Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, New York, NY
2009
Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, New York, NY
2012
Guggenheim Fellowship
Lives and works in New York City, NY
Charles Hinman was born in 1932 and raised in Syracuse, New York, where he attended art classes at the Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts (now the Everson Museum of Art). In 1954, while pursuing his BFA at Syracuse University, Hinman was a professional baseball pitcher with the Milwaukee Braves minor leagues. Hinman received his BFA in 1955 and went on to study at the Art Students League of New York for a year before serving in the army from 1956 to 1958. Hinman taught mechanical drawing at the Staten Island Academy (1960-1962) and was the shop instructor at the Woodmere Academy on Long Island (1962-1964). In these two positions, Hinman developed carpentry and engineering skills that gave him the ability to construct his own shaped canvases with complex three-dimensional curves. Hinman worked at Coenties Slip from 1960 to 1962 in a studio shared with James Rosenquist whom he had met when they were students at the Art Students League. Seeking an independent path in 1963, Hinman created his first shaped canvases in his studio on 95th Street. In 1965, Hinman moved into a larger studio on the Bowery, where Will Insley, who was also working in shaped canvases, and Robert Indiana had studios as well. Charles Hinman first received critical attention in the exhibition 7 New Artists at the Sidney Janis Gallery in May 1964 where he exhibited flat canvases cut at angles and suspended by cords. The other artists in the exhibition were: Larry Bell, Robert Irwin, Norman Ives, Robert Slutsky, Robert Whitman, and Arakawa. Hinman went on to add the third dimension to his shaped canvases while examining the subtle boundary between the picture plane and the space in front of it, as well as playing with the idea of literal versus illusionistic depth. Frank Stella and Henry Geldzahler included Hinman in their exhibition, Shape and Structure, at Tibor de Nagy in January 1965. The exhibition also included Donald Judd, Robert Morris, Carl Andre, Will Insley, Neil Williams, and Larry Bell. In the exhibition, Art in Process: The Visual Development of a Structure at Finch College Museum of Art in May 1966, structures by Judd, Sol LeWitt, Robert Morris, and Robert Smithson and shaped canvases by Hinman, Will Insley, and Sven Lukin were shown. Three Young Americans at the Oberlin College Art Museum in 1965 featured Hinman, Larry Poons, and Neil Williams. The Whitney Museum of American Art included Hinman in Young America 1965 and the following year in Art of the United States 1670-1966, as well as the 1966 annual. Hinman exhibited in the Art Institute of Chicago’s annual in 1966 and 1969. In Painting: Out from the Wall at the Des Moines Art Center in February-March 1968, Hinman exhibited alongside Insley, Lukin, George Ortman, and David Novros. Hinman’s first solo exhibition was at the Feigen Gallery in New York in Nov.-Dec. 1964, quickly followed by exhibitions with Feigen in 1965 at both his New York and Chicago galleries. Out of this 1964 show, the Museum of Modern Art, the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, and Nelson Rockefeller purchased works. In the summer of 1965, Hinman was artist-in-residence at the Aspen Institute, where he produced about fifteen small paintings, including Orange Sunspot. In 1965, Hinman was one of four Americans invited to exhibit at the Museum of Contemporary Arts in Nagaoka, Japan where Hinman shared first prize with the Japanese artist Jiro Takamatsu. This was followed by a solo exhibition at the Tokyo Gallery in October 1966. Hinman’s Sunspot series of parabolic geometric curves were exhibited in his third solo exhibition at the Feigen Gallery in January-February 1966. Hinman had another solo exhibition with Feigen in 1967 and participated in group exhibitions at the gallery until 1969. He then signed on with the Paris dealer Denise René, having solo exhibitions at Galerie Denise René in Paris in Jan.-Feb. 1971 and thereafter in her New York gallery in Mar.-Apr. 1972, Oct. 1973, and Feb.-Mar. 1975. Hinman was an instructor at the New York City program of Cornell University from 1967-1968, followed by teaching positions at, among others, Pratt Institute, the School of Visual Arts, the Cooper Union, Princeton University and the University of Georgia. Hinman held the Lamarr Dodd chair in painting for three years during his tenure at UGA and was named Lamarr Dodd Distinguished Professor of Painting throughout that term. He is now an instructor at the Art Students League of New York. Hinman’s work examines three-dimensionality, exploring a fusion of the real space of sculpture and the illusory space of painting in his shaped canvases. As he told Corinne Robbins in the catalogue for his 1980 solo exhibition at the Everson Museum of Art in Syracuse, his aim is to create “two separate entities that play against each other, to make the piece work with real and illusionary space, thus combining two separate realms that come together and play with one another.” [p.14, Hinman, Everson Museum of Art, 1980] He is drawn to forms which are buoyant, soaring, and free of gravity, leading his shapes to appear wing-like or cantilevered. Hinman begins his works by building up charcoal drawings of volumetric shapes. Out of a series of drawings, he will select one drawing to turn into “shop drawings” to determine how the organic shape in charcoal can turn into a constructed form with intricate shaped stretchers supporting it. While building the armature, he addresses the level of three-dimensionality of the work. Once the work has been stretched with canvas and given a ground, he determines the color, often creating more sketches and repainting areas several times. In the 1960s, Hinman used bright colors in his work adding an almost Pop aesthetic to his canvases, such as Poltergeist, 1964, which is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art. He said he was then using color as if he were painting a hot rod. [p.16, Hinman, Everson Museum of Art, 1980] When the Museum of Modern Art in New York included Poltergeist in its exhibition of recent acquisitions in 1965, The New York Times selected Hinman’s work out of 80 exhibited to reproduce in its review. In 1975, Hinman began an all-white series of paintings. Returning to color in the late 1970s, Hinman treated color as spatial indicators with each color representing a different canvas unit; each color has a separate stretcher underneath it. With a more muted palette of grays, silvers, and tans, the artist built subtle interactions of color shapes interlocking with each other in space within a rhythmic order. Hinman’s recent work was the subject of a traveling exhibition in 1980-1981, organized by the Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, continuing to the Laguna Gloria Art Museum in Austin, Texas (now the Austin Museum of Art – Laguna Gloria) and to the Fort Lauderdale Museum in Florida. Hinman’s work traveled to the U.S.S.R. in 1989 for an exhibition organized by Donald Kuspit titled Painting Beyond the Death of Painting at the Kuznetsky Most Exhibition Hall in Moscow. Hinman has always credited the Russian Suprematists as having a strong influence on his work. Having held the Lamar Dodd Distinguished Professorship of Art at the University of Georgia in Athens, Georgia, and Cortona, Italy, from 1991-1994, Hinman was given an exhibition at the Georgia State Museum of Art at the University in Athens in 1994. There was an accompanying catalog titled Charles Hinman: The Chimera Series, Works from Georgia. More recently, Hinman’s work has been exhibited at Douglas Drake, NYC, The Boca Raton Museum of Art, Wooster Art Space, OK Harris, Rebecca Alston Gallery, David Richard Contemporary and D. Wigmore Fine Art. A solo exhibition of Hinman’s recent work was held at the Butler Institute of American Art from October 2011 through March 2012. The Butler exhibition consisted of a painting series entitled, Gems and a silkscreen print portfolio entitled, gems, printed and published by Gary Lichtenstein Editions. Simultaneously, The Four Seasons Restaurant exhibited four of Hinman’s masterful works, created in the 80’s, within their private dining rooms. In 2012, Charles Hinman was given a stunning solo exhibition at Marc Straus Gallery entitled, Six Decades. In the spring of 2013, new work by Hinman was unveiled at Galleri Tom Christoffersen in Copenhagen. A painting of his was also featured in The Shaped Canvas, Revisited at Luxembourg & Dayan, NYC. Through January 4, 2015, Hinman’s work was exhibited last year at The Frost Art Museum, Miami, FL within the exhibition entitled A Global Exchange: Geometric Abstraction since 1950. This past summer, a suite of his paintings from the Space Windows series was exhibited at Washburn Gallery, NYC. Museum collections with Charles Hinman’s work include: the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California; the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC; the Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona; the Denver Art Museum, Colorado; the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY; the Nagaoka Museum in Japan, the Louisiana Museum in Denmark, the Tel Aviv Museum in Israel, and the Pfalzgalerie Museum in Germany, among others. In 2012 Charles Hinman was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship
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Exhibitions
2017
WESTWOOD GALLERY NYC
Kreeger Museum, Washington DC
2016
Two Points on a Plane: The Paintings of Charles Hinman. Museum of Art, DeLand, FL (solo)
2015
Space Windows. Washburn Gallery, NY, NY (solo)
2014
The Shaped Canvas, Revisited. Luxembourg & Dayan, NYC
2013
Charles Hinman - 6 Decades. MARC STRAUS, New York (solo)
Going Into the Dark, curated by Amalia Piccinini, The Painting Center, NYC
2012
MARC STRAUS, New York
2011
GEMS at the Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, OH (solo)
American Abstract Artists 75th Anniversary Exhibition, OK Harris Gallery, NYC
Structured Color, D. Wigmore Fine Art, Inc, NYC
The Armory Show, NYC
2009
Exploring Black and White: the 1930s through the 1960s, D. Wigmore Fine Art, Inc, NYC
Constructions, Galerie Denise Rene’, Paris, France
2008
Turning Point: The Shaped Canvas, Spanierman Modern, New York, NY, Curated by Gavin Spanierman
Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, OH (solo)
2006 - 2007
Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, OH (solo)
2005
American Abstract Artists Assn., Yellow Bird Gallery, Newburgh, NY
Wooster Art Space, New York, NY (solo)
George Jackson Academy, St. Mark's Place, New York, NY (solo)
Geometric Abstraction 1930-1980, Margot Stein Gallery, Lake Worth, Florida
2004
Abstractions, Lee Hansley Gallery, Raleigh, North Carolina
Current Work, Elaine Baker Gallery, Boca Raton, Florida
Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, FL (solo)
Margot Stein Gallery, Lake Worth, FL (solo)
Blast from the Past, Pace Prints, New York, NY
2003
Gallery Artists, Margot Stein Gallery, Lake Worth, Florida
2002
Light and Shadow, Delaware Valley Arts Alliance, Narrowsburg, New York, Curated by Corinne Robbins
2001 - 2005
Landing Gallery, Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, FL (solo)
2001
XXXIII Festival International de la Peinture, Castle Museum, Cagnes-sur-Mer, France
Painted in New York City, Hofstra University, Hempstead, New York, Curated by James Little
Art for the New Century: Painting and Sculpture, Lee Hansley Gallery, Raleigh, NC
2000
Foundation of a Century, Nassau County Museum of Art, Roslyn Harbor, New York
The Art of Absolute Desire, 450 Broadway, New York, NY, Curated by James Little
1999
Red, Mitchell Algus Gallery, New York, NY
Gallery Camino Real, Boca Raton, Florida (solo)
The Armory Show, Mitchell Algus Gallery, The International Fair of New Art, New York, NY
Red, Black, White: Bolotowsky, Nevelson, Hinman, Weber Fine Art, Scarsdale, New York
Absolut Secret, D’Allenburg Fine Arts International, David McKee Gallery, New York Studio School, New York; Royal College of Art, London
Abstraction: New Directions for a New Millenium, Robert Kidd Gallery, Birmingham, Michigan
Fairfield University Museum, Fairfield, CT (solo)
Summer 1998 Exhibition, Space 504 Gallery, New York, NY
1998
Bergen County Museum of Art, Paramus, NJ (solo)
Recent Acquisitions, Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, Florida
Art Students League of New York: Instructors’ Work, Gremillion Fine Art, Houston, Texas
Gallery Artists, Lipworth International, Boca Raton, Florida
Abstractions: Charles Hinman and Manfred Mohr, Angela Danielle Gallery, New York, NY
French Designer Showhouse, New York, NY, Curated by Jane Victor
1997
Windows ’97, The Art Students’ League, New York, NY
1996 - 2004
Windows, Art Students League, New York, NY
1996
Exploring Dimensions, Space 504, New York, NY
Coenties Slip: Early 60’s, Elaine Goodheart Gallery, Sag Harbor, New York, Curated by Martha Henry
Three in Three Dimensions, Space 504, New York, NY
Gallery Artists, Margaret Lipworth Gallery, Boca Raton, Florida
1995
Reconstructivism: New Geometric Painting in NY, Space 504, New York, NY, Curated by Peter Frank
Artists of the Gallery, Nordstamp/Lipworth International Fine Art, Boca Raton, Florida
From the Collectors, Heckscher Museum, Huntington, New York
Across State Lines, Neuberger Museum, Purchase, New York
Charles Hinman: The Chimera Series, Works from Georgia, Ewing Gallery, The University of Tennessee's Downtown Gallery, Knoxville, TN (solo)
1994
Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA
1993
Chassie Post Gallery, Atlanta, GA (solo)
Uga Summer, University of Georgia Abroad, Cortona, Italy
1992
Recent Acquisitions, Georgia State Museum of Art, Athens, Georgia
1991
GraphicStudio, National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, Curated by Ruth E. Fine
Skowhegan: For Frances and Sydney Lewis, Midtown Payson Galleries, New York, NY, Curated by Frederieke Taylor
Selections From the Permanent Collection, Laguna Gloria Art Museum, Austin, Texas
Physicality, Hunter College Galleries, New York, NY
1990 - 1994
Douglas Drake Gallery, New York, NY (solo)
1990
Gallery Artists, Margaret Lipworth Fine Arts, Boca Raton, Florida
1989
American Painting Since the Death of Painting, Kuznetsky Most Exhibition Hall, Moscow, USSR, Curated by Donald Kuspit
Very Special Arts, Christie’s, New York, NY, Curated by Jean Kennedy Smith
Aspects of the 60’s, Virginia Lust Gallery, New York, NY
Virginia Lust Gallery, New York, NY (solo)
Recent Acquisitions, Musee’ de Beaux Arts de l’Ontario, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
1988
Abstraction: Systems, Hunter College Galleries, New York, NY
1987
Recent Acquisitions, North Carolina State University Museum, Raleigh, North Carolina
1986 - 1988
Gallery Artists, Irving Galleries, Palm Beach, Florida
1986 - 1987
I. Irving Feldman Galleries, West Bloomfield, Michigan (solo)
1986
Pop Art, Minimal Art: Artists-in-Residence in Aspen, The Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, Colorado
Painting in the Third Dimension, City Without Walls, Newark, NJ, Curated by Martha Henry and Chris Christofaro
1985
Art for Page Hall, North Carolina State University Museum, Raleigh, North Carolina
Exuberant Abstraction, The Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States and the Mendik Company, New York, NY
Gallery 99, Bay Harbor Island, Florida (solo)
1984
I. Irving Feldman Galleries, Sarasota, Florida (solo)
Viewpoint, Cranbrook Academy of Art Museum, Bloomfield, Michigan
1983
20th Anniversary Vera and Albert List Art Poster Program, Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York, NY, Curated by Martin E. Segal, Chairman of the Board
Medici-Berenson Gallery, Bay Harbor Island, Florida (solo)
Laguna Gloria Art Museum, Austin, Texas (solo)
Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale, Florida (solo)
Works on Paper, Frank Merino Gallery, New York, NY
1981
Planar Painting, Alternative Center for International Arts, New York, NY, Curated by Corinne Robins
1980
Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York (solo)
1979
Grace Hokin Gallery, Chicago, Illinois (solo)
Selected Alumni, Lowe Gallery, Syracuse University, Syracuse, New York
1978
Constructs, Bleecker Street, New York, NY, Curated by Eliot Lable
1977
Collector’s Choice, Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, Connecticut
Grace Hokin Gallery, Palm Beach, Florida (solo)
1976
Irving Galleries, Milwaukee, Wisconsin (solo)
Bicentennial Banners, Chuck Levitan, Inc., Works of Art, New York, NY
1975 - 1976
Grace Hokin Gallery, Chicago, Illinois (solo)
1975
Important Postwar and Contemporary Art, Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, Ohio, Curated by Ellen H. Johnson
1974
Striped and Shaped Canvasses, Bronx Museum of Arts, Bronx, New York
1973
Group Show, Museum of Art, Wilmington, Delaware
1971 - 1975
Galerie Denise Rene’, New York, NY (solo)
1971
The Collection of the Chase Manhattan Bank, Finch College Gallery, New York, NY, Curated by Mary Lanier
1970
Opening Exhibition, Contemporary Art Center, Cincinnati, Ohio
Galerie Denise Rene’/Hans Mayer, Krefeld, West Germany (solo)
1969
Lincoln Center Retrospective, New York, NY (solo)
29th Annual Exhibition, Chicago Art Institute, Chicago, Illinois
1968 - 1979
Donald Morris Gallery, Detroit, Michigan (solo)
1968
From the Collection of Robert B. Mayer, Museum of Art, Wilmington, Delaware
1967
Collection, 180 Beacon Street, Boston, Massachusetts
Richard Feigen Gallery, New York, NY (solo)
1966
Tokyo Gallery, Tokyo, Japan (solo)
Art in Progress, Finch College Museum, New York, NY, Curated by Elaine Varian
1965
Recent Acquisitions, Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY
1964 - 1965
Richard Feigen Gallery, New York, NY (solo)
1964
Quantum I, Noah Goldowsky Gallery, New York, NY
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Public Collections
Whitney Museum of American Art, NYC
Denver Museum, Denver, CO
Detroit Institute of Art, Detroit, MI
European American Bank, Huntington, NY
Everson Museum, Syracuse, NY
Flint Institute of Arts, Flint, MI
Fort Lauderdale Museum of Art, Fort Lauderdale, FL
Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington, DC
Delaware Museum, Wilmington, DE
Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, LI, NY
Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, NY
Aldrich Museum, Ridgefield, CT
Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH
American Republic Insurance Company, Des Moines, IA
Aspen Institute of Humanistic Studies, Aspen, CO
Boca Raton Museum of Art, Boca Raton, FL
Boise-Cascade Corporation, Boise, ID
Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, OH
The Ackland Museum, Chapel Hill, NC
Musee des Beaux Arts de l'Ontario, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Museum of Modern Art, NYC
Museum of Modern Art, Nagoaka, Japan
The Weatherspoon Gallery, Greensboro, NC
Williams College Museum, Williamstown, MA
North Carolina State University Museum, Raleigh, NC
Pennsylvania State University Museum, Philadelphia, PA
Princeton University Museum, Princeton, NJ
The Rockefeller Collection, NYC
Santa Barbara Museum of Art, Santa Barbara, CA
SAS Institute, Cary, NC
Shearson Company, NYC
State University of New York, Stony Brook, NY
Tel Aviv Museum, Tel Aviv, Israel
Wake Forest University Museum, Winston-Salem, NC
Krannert Art Museum, Urbana, IL
Laguna Gloria Art Museum, Austin, TX
Lehigh University Museum, Bethlehem, PA
Los Angeles County Museum, Los Angeles, CA
Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark
Milwaukee Art Center, Milwaukee, WI
McCrory Corporation, NYC
Chase Manhattan Bank, NYC
Continental Grain Corporation, NYC
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Literature
1983
Charles Hinman: May 5-28, 1983, Galleri Bellman (catalogue)
1980
Robins, Corinne, (et al.) Charles Hinman, current works. Everson Museum of Art : Syracuse, NY, 1980 (catalogue)