Gloria Garfinkel (1929 – 2024) was an American visual artist based in New York.[1][2]
Work
editGarfinkel studied Apparel Design at the Fashion Institute of Technology in New York City from 1947 to 1949. She realized she wanted to be an artist while taking a life-drawing class in the basement of FIT, then on West 24th Street.[3]
Career
editGarfinkel had developed a daily practice creating paintings, sculptures, and collaged prints showcasing the artist's interest in the fashion and decorative motifs of Japan.[4][5] She is best known for her brightly colored, highly patterned works that bridge the gap between sculpture and painting.[6]
As Mary Hrbacek said in a 2015 review of Garfinkel's work for Artes Magazine:
Garfinkel’s ability to balance striking elements in an integral visual harmony brings transformation to the borders of imagination, yielding vibrant works whose fundamental truths probe the similarities between Western and Japanese art forms.[7]
In 2021, A.I.R. Gallery mounted the largest New York City solo show of Garfinkel's 70-year career, curated by Mara Williams, chief curator of Vermont's Brattleboro Museum and Art Center.[8]
Exhibitions and collections
editGarfinkel had exhibited internationally for more than 30 years, with solo exhibitions at Paul Sharpe Contemporary Art, Associated American Artists, and Bodely Gallery, all in New York; Yellow Bird Gallery, Newburgh, N.Y.; The International Museum of Art & Science, McAllen, Texas; Ulrich Museum, Wichita, Kansas; Artestudio Sumithra, Ravenna, Italy, and Emerson Gallery Museum, Hamilton College, Clinton, N.Y.[9]
Her work is included in the collection of the Worcester Art Museum.[10]
References
edit- ^ "Miss Backman, Researcher, Wed". New York Times. October 3, 1990.
- ^ "Gloria Garfinkel, 1929-2024". Legacy.com. 2024.
- ^ "Alumni Notes". No. Spring 2016. HUE FIT Magazine.
- ^ Dunne, Susan. "Artist's Fascination With Asia Inspired Origami-Like Exhibit". courant.com.
- ^ Burnet, Carand (March–April 2015). "Origami Interpretations: Artwork by Gloria Garfinkel; Above the Fold: New expressions in Origami". Art New England.
- ^ Goodman, Jonathan (November 2015). "Gloria Garfinkel". Sculpture Magazine.
- ^ Hrbacek, Mary (December 9, 2014). "Springfield Museum & Contemporary Art of Gloria Garfinkel: Origami Interpretations". Artes Magazine.
- ^ Cascone, Sarah (December 14, 2021). "Editors' Picks: 11 Events for Your Art Calendar, From an Auction for Abortion Rights to a Tribute to Dealer Martha Jackson". artnet news.
- ^ "ORIGAMI VARIATIONS: Works by Gloria Garfinkel". AMA Magazine. Fall 2019.
- ^ "Works – Gloria Garfinkel – People – Worcester Art Museum". worcester.emuseum.com.