Work by Lorser Feitleson at Art Basel 2019

ART BASEL MIAMI BEACH

Booth #G6

4 - 8 December 2019

MILES MCENERY GALLERY presents “The Responsive Eye Revisited: Then, Now, and In-Between” at the 2019 edition of Art Basel Miami Beach. Previewing on 4 December, and opening to the public on 5 December, the fair will run through 8 December at the Miami Beach Convention Center in Miami Beach, Florida. Following the fair, the exhibition will travel to the gallery’s 520 West 21st Street location in Chelsea, New York. 

The exhibition includes a selection of works by contemporary artists — Beverly Fishman, Warren Isensee, Markus Linnenbrink, and Patrick Wilson — alongside artists who themselves participated in the original exhibition or were active in the decades in-between — Josef Albers, Karl Benjamin, Gene Davis, Lorser Feitelson, Frederick Hammersley, John McLaughlin, Kenneth Noland, and Al Held.

The press release, with some images, can be found at https://www.milesmcenery.com/art-fairs/art-basel-miami-beach15

PUBLIC DAYS:

Thursday 5 December, 3–8 pm

Friday 6 December, 12–8 pm

Saturday 7 December, 12–8 pm

Sunday 8 December, 12–6 pm

Untitled, March 31, 1964, oil and enamel on canvas, 60x40in./152.4x101.6cm, © The Feitelson / Lundeberg Art Foundation, Courtesy Louis Stern Fine Arts

Untitled, March 31, 1964, oil and enamel on canvas, 60x40in./152.4x101.6cm, © The Feitelson / Lundeberg Art Foundation, Courtesy Louis Stern Fine Arts

MILES MCENERY GALLERY

520 W 21st Street New York, NY 10011
Tel: +1 (212) 445 0051

Lundeberg exhibition at Art Basel Miami Beach

With support form the Feitelson/Lundeberg Art Foundation, Louis Stern Fine Arts is exhibiting at Art Basel Miami Beach 2019:

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Louis Stern Fine Arts is exhibiting at Art Basel Miami Beach
December 4-8, 2019

Booth S07

A suite of seven paintings from the 1960s highlights Helen Lundeberg’s exploration of hard-edge abstracted space, from rolling landscapes to cavernous interiors. With geometric sensitivity, Lundeberg’s blocks of color come to logical convergences while rounded lines resonate cutting depths. Stretched angles form undulating landscapes that expand outward toward open space, while yawning portals render deep interiors. Internal chambers, as in Arcanum I, 1967, elicit bare and echoing cathedrals as narrow arched views segment the lofty columns they house. In Untitled, 1964, mapped with poetic breath, swaths of valley green and river blue divide structural negative space.

In 1934 Southern California, with partner and fellow artist Lorser Feitelson, Lundeberg founded the "Subjective Classicism” movement, which later became known as Post Surrealism. In breaking with European Surrealism, Lundeberg and Feitelson affirmed conscious, rather than unconscious, sources of imagery by pairing the rationale of neoclassicism with a curiosity for the metaphysical. This new approach to painting guided the viewer through a composition’s deep space with a theatrical intensity, rousing strange encounters with everyday scenes.

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images © The Feitelson / Lundeberg Art Foundation


April 11, 2018 – Dr. Ilene Susan Fort Talk at Rutgers

Past Event

Helen Lundeberg, One and One Half, 1974, acrylic on canvas, 8 x 15 in./ 20.3 x 38.1 cm, Wendy Van Haerlem Collection, 1979

Helen Lundeberg, One and One Half, 1974, acrylic on canvas, 8 x 15 in./ 20.3 x 38.1 cm, Wendy Van Haerlem Collection, 1979

Dr. Ilene Susan Fort, formerly Senior Curator of American Art, and The Gail and John Liebes Curator of American Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), is now Curator Emerita at LACMA and Senior Scholar at the Center for Women in the Arts and Humanities at Rutgers University, 2018 - 2019. Dr. Fort will be giving an illustrated talk on Lundeberg at Rutgers on APRIL 11, 2018.


FEBRUARY 21-24, 2018 – College Art Association Conference

PAST EVENT

Helen Lundeberg, Night Flying In, 1984–1985

Helen Lundeberg, Night Flying In, 1984–1985

FEBRUARY 21–24, 2018 The annual College Art Association conference was held at the Los Angeles Convention Center.  The Foundation and Louis Stern Fine Arts made its publications available for viewing and sale at Booth 430 of the Book and Trade Fair attached to the convention.


FEBRUARY 24, 2018 – Jale Nejdet Erzen, Ph.D. Talk

PAST EVENT

Lorser Feitelson, Magical Space Forms, 1951, 50 x 74 inches, 127 x 188 centimeters. © Feitelson/Lundeberg Art Foundation

Lorser Feitelson, Magical Space Forms, 1951, 50 x 74 inches, 127 x 188 centimeters. © Feitelson/Lundeberg Art Foundation

FEBRUARY 24, 2018 5:00 p.m.  The Foundation and Louis Stern Fine Arts hosted a special event at Louis Stern Fine Arts, 9002 Melrose Avenue, West Hollywood, California 90069.  Jale Nejdet Erzen, Ph.D.  spoke on Feitelson’s work and personal memories from her long association with Feitelson.  

Refreshments were provided at this free event. A recording of Dr. Erzen's talk is available on Facebook through the Louis Stern Fine Arts website.