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preview
the exhibition here
Adam
Baumgold Gallery presents an exhibition by Christina Ramberg of paintings
and drawings from the late sixties to the eighties. This will be the first
New York solo exhibition of Christina Ramberg in twenty years and will
include approximately fifteen paintings and forty drawings, along with
prints and Chicago imagist ephemera, by an artist who was "a dynamic
presence and central figure in contemporary art in Chicago and in the
history of feminist art".1
Christina
Ramberg was one of a small group of influential women artists in the 1960s
and 1970s including Eva Hesse, Ree Morton and Louise Bourgeois, to use
overt female imagery and address issues such as gender and gender confusion,
fetishism and bondage in their art. In all of Ramberg's provocative imagery
"there is a concern about the implications of mass culture and vernacular
representations of femininity and the body"2 that is always
executed with great formal strength within the stylistic iconographic
boundaries of Chicago imagism.
Christina
Ramberg's drawings, mostly untitled, undated, and small in scale, are
obsessive, meticulously executed works that are musings about gender and
the possibilities for her paintings and her art. These drawings are executed
in hieroglyphic-like lists and rows, for example, a drawing of a woman's
hands are shown in a multitude of positions being gently or tightly bound
by handkerchiefs. Also, multiple views of female hairdos, seen from behind,
morph into heads of lettuce while other drawings show headless, corseted
bodices, in various angles and contours that seem to become vessel-like.
Included
in the exhibition will be many of the seminal torso paintings such as
Probed Cinch, (1971), and Wired (1974) that are "immaculate
icons in which bodices cropped at the neck and knees are encased in gorgeous
textures: lace, leather, metal...wrapped and ornamented, these disembodied
trunks become generative and menacing hybrids, signifying female pleasure
and power."3
Christina
Ramberg's work was included in the Who Chicago? exhibition in 1980,
The Figurative Tradition of American Art at the Whitney Museum
of American Art in 1980, as well as Whitney Biennials in 1972 and
1979. Christina Ramberg A Retrospective: 1968-1988 was held at
the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago in 1988, and the
traveling exhibition, Christina Ramberg Drawings, started at Gallery
400/University of Illinois at Chicago College of Architecture and the
Arts in May 2000.
Christina
Ramberg's work is in the permanent collections of the Art Institute of
Chicago, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, the National Collection
of Fine Arts, Smithsonian Institute, the Whitney Museum of American Art
and the Museum Moderner Kunst in Vienna, among others.
The gallery hours
are Tuesday through Saturday 11:00 - 5:30 PM. A preview of the exhibition
can be seen at www.adambaumgoldgallery.com.
1
and 2: Karen Indeck, Christina Ramberg Drawings, 2000
3: Judith Russi Kirshner, Christina Ramberg Drawings, 2000
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