Frances Barth is a noted American artist and teacher. She makes abstract paintings
and videos and has been the director of the multi-disciplinary Graduate school
at Maryland Institute College of Art, the Mount Royal School of Art, since
2004. Born in New York City, a graduate of Hunter College for both her BFA
and MFA, Frances was on the faculty at Yale University from 1986 until 2004,
and appointed full professor in 2001. She was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship
in 1977 and is in the canon of historically significant women abstract painters
working in New York since the 1970's. Her work is in the collections of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Whitney Museum
of American Art, among others.
"... it's not an overstatement to say that they (Barth's paintings)
suggest new possibilities for what abstract painting can encompass in the
first part of the 21st century." Karen Wilkin, "Frances Barth" (catalog)
2008, Sundaram Tagore Gallery
Frances Barth's accomplished paintings are wholly individualistic and other
than to say they are "radical abstractions" Karen Wilkin, they are
eccentric enough to elude classification. Barth refers to aspects of her work
as a combination of comic restraint and purist abstraction. Combining contradictory
elements of local color with abstract color, vocabularies of both painting
and drawing, disorienting spatial relationships, Barth creates works that are
as provocatively ambiguous as they are soothingly beautiful. In her desire
to "tell stories without words" Barth implies narratives and geographies
in a realm between landscape, mapping and abstraction. The narratives in the
paintings are stories taking place over a period of geological time, with references
both topographic and tectonic, alluding to simultaneous multiple histories.
The light that Barth creates within her paintings is a spell-binding presence
that shifts the picture plane into a deep dimensional space at the same time
that her compositional shifts in scale destabilize. Speaking on her use of
color the artist refers to her desire to create "big areas of ungracious
color - chemical color that doesn't exist in nature - to open up like the sky
but not be sky."
|