Altoon Sultan (1948) is an American artist and author who specializes in rural landscapes painted in egg tempera. Her works are in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, and the Yale University Art Gallery. She has received two grants from the National Endowment for the Arts. She received her BFA in 1969 after studying painting at Brooklyn College, and her MFA in 1971, also at Brooklyn College, where she studied with Philip Pearlstein and Lois Dodd.[1] She also attended Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.[2]

Altoon Sultan maintains a popular blog, Studio and Garden, in which she posts nature photographs of her home in Groton, Vermont, her land and garden, her thoughts about her art-making, and reviews and photographs of exhibitions she frequently visits in New York City and elsewhere.[3] Sultan is known for her dedication to materials and color, often valuing the two over a deeper meaning to her pieces. She is also known for rejecting the large scale that minimalist art often takes, instead favoring a smaller, more intimate scale.

Exhibitions

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Sultan's art was shown at McKenzie Fine Art in New York in 2017.[4] Her bas-relief sculptures in painted porcelain, begun in 2015, were exhibited for the first time in the show at McKenzie. Her 2007 show Monuments of Architecture at the Tibor de Nagy Gallery featured her egg-tempera paintings showing the influence of her photography.[5]

Collections

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Sultan's art is included in the National Gallery of Australia's Kenneth Tyler Collection.

Biography

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  • Altoon Sultan, The Luminous Brush: Painting With Egg Tempera, Watson Guptill Publications, New York 1999. ISBN 0-8230-2888-7

References

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  1. ^ "A Conversation With Altoon Sultan". Figure/Ground. 4 November 2013. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  2. ^ "Altoon Sultan". Art in America. March 2019. Retrieved 2 March 2019.
  3. ^ "Studio and Garden". Altoon Sultan. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  4. ^ "Altoon Sultan". McKenzie Fine Art. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
  5. ^ "Altoon Sultan – Exhibitions – The Tibor de Nagy Gallery". Tibor De Nagy Gallery. Retrieved 20 May 2017.
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