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Material world of four women artists

All four turned to collage as their careers developed

May 16, 2024 16:24
WEB picture main
3 min read

Half of the American women artists celebrated in a new exhibition were Jewish, and all four had much to cope with as they built their careers in the twentieth century. Lilly Fenichel was forced to flee Nazi persecution at 11, Nancy Grossman was pressed into child labour by impoverished parents, while the self-confidence of a precocious Helen Frankenthaler collapsed when the father who worshipped her died before she hit her teens. By comparison, Perle Fine had it easy; her family had already escaped the pogroms in Russia by the time she was born in 1905.

But Fine did have to find new ways of expressing herself to make a comeback in the sexist art world of New York from which she retreated after making her name. She substituted wood for canvas.

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For her part, Frankenthaler made a book about her career into art in its own right, exhibiting hand-painted linen covers for 62 copies at the prestigious Metropolitan Museum of Art. Fenichel turned to collaging mat board with paper, while Grossman harnessed the skills she learned sewing gussets for her parents’ tailoring enterprise to stitch leather and metal into assemblages which made her an international name in the 1970s.

Nancy Grossman (Photo: awarewomenartists.com)[Missing Credit]

“There’s no leather in the Grossman collage we are showing, but there are traces of pattern cutting,” says George Barker of London’s Gazelli Art House, who has put together this show of female abstract expressionists who worked on anything other than canvas. Grossman, 84, whose works are in the collections of the Israel Museum and the Tel Aviv Museum of Art, is the only one still alive, and the one who has most fully revealed the pain of her early life.

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