Cecile Abish (born 1930) is an American artist known primarily for her works in sculpture and photography. Abish was an urban planner until 1965, when she devoted herself full-time to art.[1] Her works have been shown in the Newark College of Engineering, the Institute of Contemporary Art in Boston, and the Architektur Zentrum in Vienna.[2] Her late husband, the writer Walter Abish, wrote The Shape of Absence in 1990, based on her work.[3]

Cecile Abish
Born1930 (age 93–94)
New York City, US
EducationBrooklyn College
Known forSculpture, photography

Sculpture

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For many years, Abish's primary focus was sculpture installations. She frequently combined manufactured materials, such as particle board, and multitudes of marbles.[4] Her work How 4 into 4 into 3 (1975) consists of homasote, marbles, and baking soda. This homosote is placed upright alongside the interior walls of a room, while the floor is covered with marbles. The marbles are separated next to the homosote, creating a shadow-like effect as if the marbles were light. This is reflected by the title of the work; in one corner, four particle boards create four shadows, in the opposite corner only three shadows are visible from the four particle boards.[5]

Abish, Carl Andre, Beverly Pepper, and Tony Smith created a "Statement of Sculptors" that was published in the December 1975 issue of Art Journal.[5] Abish's section was entitled "Duration of the Sculpture in Possession of a Surface." She argued that the surfaces upon which she works do not belong to her. She temporarily takes possession of the surface.[5] In her view, sculpture has a significant impact on the world around it: "The thousands of marbles [referring to her work How 4 into 4 into 3] add a hard but penetrable surface to the surface…this new surface is an omnidirectional translucent flowing surface."[5] Abish further explains the harmony that a surface has with a completed sculpture after the two are one: "Everywhere surfaces await the coming of sculpture. The coming of a new vision, as floors will drop away and the boundary lines will be drawn."[5]

This idea is explored further in Near Where I live (1976), where several boards are laid on the ground, with thousands of marbles on the bare space between the boards. The boards have incisions on them in such a way that creates a channel across each board; gaps in the marbles continue the route. The result, says reviewer Barbera Cavaliere, "suggests a continuum within the structure… a sweeping arabesque motion only partially present in the incised arcs, enhancing the lyrical flow felt also in the scattered shiny marbles."[4] In 1974, Lawrence Alloway wrote, "The work of Cecile Abish has been harder to see than it should have been. The distribution problem has arisen not only because she has no gallery, but because her works are usually erected on the spot."[6] He concludes that the work of Abish demands to be seen and documented.

Photography

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Abish participated in "Deconstruction/Reconstruction: The Transformation of Photographic Information Into Metaphor", an art exhibition focused on photomanipulation. The exhibition featured artists by manipulating different photographs and reconstructing them into one.[7] Specifically for Abish, multiple photographs were taken and were essentially cut into jigsaw puzzle pieces, which were then rearranged and reassembled to create new works, such as Firsthand.[8] Abish also took photographs of museum interiors, which were used in Walter Abish's writing work What Else? to accompany the museological tone of the book.[9] Many of Abish's photographs are silver gelatin prints.

Work

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Abish has exhibited in New York at the Alessandra Gallery, the Bykert Gallery, and the Michael Walls Gallery. She has also shown in Ohio, Massachusetts, and Michigan, as well as Germany, Austria, and France.[2] She has been associated as a visual artist with the University of Massachusetts,[10] Amherst College, Cooper Union, and Harvard University. She earned a BFA at Brooklyn College in 1953.[2]

Abish contributed the graphic art for volume 15 (April 1984) of Fiction International, the first issue published by San Diego University Press.[11]

References

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  1. ^ Heller, Jules; Heller, Nancy, eds. (1995). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. New York: Garland Publishing. pp. 6–7. ISBN 9780824060497. OCLC 31865530.
  2. ^ a b c "Abish Cecile," in Marquis Who's Who in America (2013)
  3. ^ Hassan, Ihab (Summer 1994). "Ecliptic art -- Eclipse Fever by Walter Abish". The Southern Review. 30 (3): 627. . . .his essay, "The Shape of Absence," about the art of Cecile Abish, his gifted spouse.
  4. ^ a b Barbera Cavaliere, "Cecile Abish," review of Near Where I live, by Cecile Abish. Womanart 1 No. 4 (1977): 28
  5. ^ a b c d e Abish, Cecile (Winter 1975–76). "Statements by Sculptors". Art Journal. 35 (2): 126. doi:10.2307/776022. JSTOR 776022.
  6. ^ Alloway, Lawrence (May 1974). "Cecile Abish". Artforum. 12 (9): 48–49. Archived from the original on 29 October 2023. Retrieved 17 January 2023.
  7. ^ "Avant-Garde Photo Show". New York Times. 27 June 1980. pp. C28. 'Deconstruction/Reconstruction: The Transformation of Photographic Information Into Metaphor,' an exhibition that presents new ways of using photographic images in depicitng modern life, will open at the New Museum on July 12. The artists are. . . .Cecile Abish. . .
  8. ^ "Cecile Abish". New Museum. Archived from the original on 1 October 2012. Retrieved 10 March 2013.
  9. ^ "99: The New Meaning," Sulfur 28 Spring (1991): 220-221
  10. ^ "Faculty Notes". Art Journal. 33 (2): 156. Winter 1973–74. JSTOR 775770. Big news from artists at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. . . .New faculty are. . . .Cecile Abish, sculptor. . .
  11. ^ "Fictional International [subscription form]". Boundary 2. 12 (1): 255. Autumn 1983. JSTOR 302957. Our first issue, Volume 15, no. 1 (April, 1984) will focus on the theme of 'Writing and Politics,' including. . . .graphic art by Cecile Abish. . .