Emily Fuller (born August 9, 1941) is an American artist who has been working in a variety of media since the Seventies. Also known as Emily Rutgers Fuller, Emily R. Fuller, and Emily Fuller Kingston, she lives and works in New York City and Dutchess County, New York.
Emily Fuller | |
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Born | New York, New York | August 9, 1941
Occupation | Artist |
Nationality | American |
Website | |
emilyfullerart |
Fuller describes herself as "a contemporary painter who finds subject matter in New York State's Harlem River Valley in northeast Dutchess County." Her work was praised by the critic John Russell of The New York Times in the course of an article, "Art: New Drawings at the Modern". Among praise for her work, he concluded: "There is nothing wrong with a department that can range with an easy assurance from de Chirico and Modigliani to Miss Fuller."[1]
Early life
editFuller was born in New York City and raised on Long Island. Her sensitivity to color, texture and composition was formed early in life by exposure to her parents' extensive gardens.
She was also influenced by the work of her grandmother, Lucy Washington Hurry (1880–1950), a still-life watercolorist who studied at the Art Students League of New York with Kenyon Cox and Fayette Barnum,[2] and whose work was shown at the Philadelphia Water Color Exhibition alongside that of Edith Emerson, Jessie Willcox Smith, Clifton Wheeler, Violet Oakley and Jules Guerin in 1919.[3]
Education
editFuller studied at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, between 1962 and 1966, at Tufts University in 1966, at the Art Students League in New York (where she was taught by Richard Mayhew) during 1968 and 1969, and at the School of Visual Arts in New York (where she was taught by John A. Parks) during 1998 and 1999.
Originally an abstract artist, Fuller has also been sewing paper and canvas works since 1977. She learned how to sew at the Garland Junior College (now known as Simmons College) in Boston, where it was a required course.
She has said, "The art of Dutch, French and German paintings from the 16th through the 18th centuries is very appealing to me." More contemporary influences included Nancy Graves, Jasper Johns, Christo, and Willem de Kooning.
Career
editFuller's first solo show was at 55 Mercer, an artist-run gallery in New York City, in 1972.
One of her paper pieces was shown in a group show called "New Art for the New Year" at the Museum of Modern Art in February 1978. Among the other artists exhibited were Jim Dine, Jasper Johns, Philip Pearlstein, James Rosenquist, Frank Stella, and Tom Wesselmann.[4]
Fuller's work has also been exhibited abroad. It was included in UNESCO's "Féminin-dialogue Peinture/Couture" in Paris in 1977, and in "Neue Stofflichkeit" (New Materialism) at the Bonn Women's Museum in Germany in 1984.
Fuller's mature style was described in some detail as part of a review of her one-woman show in Millbrook, New York in 2015: "The multi-media works evoke the glory of the surrounding area, fields, mountains and trees, but with a variety of materials, colors, and stories to tell that are far different from the landscapes one usually expects to see…. The myriad materials used, creations of a playful and creative imagination, run from paper to canvas to textiles, sewn, glued, painted, photographed – many with a touch of glitter and metallic paint."[5]
Fuller's work is in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art.[4]
Personal life
editIn 1970 Fuller married Carl John Kingston ll, known as CJ. He was named after his grandfather, Carl John Kingston, a mining engineer from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan, who with his wife, Caroline Los Kamp Kingston, bought a farm outside Casablanca, Chile in the early part of the 20th Century. The farm is still owned by the Kingston family, who founded Kingston Family Vineyards on the property in the early 1990s.
Before the birth of their son, Samuel S. R. Kingston, on March 26, 1972, John Kingston became ill with cancer of the liver and Intestines. Samuel was only seven months old when his father died on October 27, 1972.[6] Fuller's second marriage ended in divorce.
References
edit- ^ John Russell, "Art: New Drawings At the Modern", The New York Times, August 10, 1979
- ^ Entry on Lucy W. Hurry, "American Art Directory, Volume 16," p.519, R.R. Bowker, 1919.
- ^ Catalogue of the Philadelphia Water Color Exhibition, 1919, p.46,
- ^ a b "Emily Fuller". Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 3 November 2023.
- ^ Judith O'Hara Balfe, "Emily Fuller exhibit at library", The Millerton News, September 10, 2015
- ^ "C. JOHN KINGSTON". The New York Times. 1972-10-29. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-02-17.