Deborah Dancy
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Featured Works
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Biography
Deborah Dancy
Deborah Dancy is a multi-media abstract artist, whose works examine and mine abstraction’s potential to move across mediums and materials exploring subtlety and confrontation. Dancy's latest exhibition with the gallery, Body of Evidence, provides a comprehensive survey of the artist’s explorations in various mediums including painting, sculpture, and photography, which she unites to pursue a trenchant investigation of abstraction, narrative, and the pernicious undercurrents of American history.
There is an undercurrent of nuance and tension that mark her work, as if something is poised to happen. Dancy’s gestural brushstrokes—what she calls “tangential entanglements” and “linear demarcations”—are characteristic of her engaging, disruptive style. Abutting shapes and colors are inserted to provoke and entice, yet disrupt. From densely painted fields to minimally suggested forms, Dancy’s work operates in the recognition that moments, meanderings, accidents and process operate best when beautiful and disconcerting are combined. Her paintings, sensuous linear gestures glide across the surface until abruptly they collide with the unexpected.
Dancy embraces the natural ambiguity of abstraction. Although her works are inspired by her own emotions and experiences, they also allow viewers to contemplate their own relationships to her work. Dancy says, “I make abstract work because I am interested in its ability to operate in a realm in which beauty and tension simultaneously exist without explanation or narrative.” In her photography as well as her sculptures, one finds images, cobbled bricolage of detritus, found and fabricated objects, playful yet pointed exist as simultaneously humorous and grotesque.
Deborah Dancy retired in 2017 as Professor Emeritus of art at the University of Connecticut where she was on the faculty in the Department of Art and Art History since 1981. She has received numerous significant honors and awards, including: a John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship, New England Foundation for the Arts/NEA Individual Artist Grant, Nexus Press Artist Book Project Award, Visual Studies Artist Book Project Residency Grant, The American Antiquarian Society’s William Randolph Hearst Fellowship, a YADDO Fellow, Women’s Studio Workshop Residency Grant, Connecticut Commission of the Arts Artist Grant, as well as a Connecticut Book Award Illustration Nominee.
In 2018 Dancy was included in the exhibition Magnetic Fields, organized by the Kemper Museum and traveled as well to the National Museum of Women in the Arts. Magnetic Fields places abstract works by multiple generations of black women artists in context with one another—and within the larger history of abstract art—for the first time, revealing the artists’ role as under-recognized leaders in abstraction. Dancy has exhibited nationally and internationally at museums and institutions such as The Fuller Museum, The Housatonic Museum, The Mattatuck Museum, The College of Saint Rose, The University of Rhode Island, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, The Spencer Museum, The Mead Art Museum, SACI Gallery, Florence, Italy, The US Embassy in Paris, and The DeCordova Museum. Her work is in numerous collections including: The High Museum, Atlanta, The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, The Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO, 21C Museum, The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, The Birmingham Museum of Art, The Hunter Museum, The Detroit Institute of Art, The Montgomery Museum of Art, The Spencer Museum of Art, The Hunter Museum of Art, Vanderbilt University, Grinnell College, Oberlin College Museum of Art, Davidson Art Center, Wesleyan University, The Bellagio Hotel, and The United States Embassy in Cameroon.
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Paintings
64 x 70-
Deborah Dancy
Sweet Dreams, 2021acrylic and oil on canvas
70 x 64 inches -
Deborah Dancy
History Lesson, 2021oil on canvas
70 x 64 inches -
Deborah Dancy
Body of Evidence, 2021oil on canvas
70 x 64 inches -
Deborah Dancy
At Cross Purposes, 2018oil on canvas
70 x 64 inches -
Deborah Dancy
The Hive, 2017oil on canvas
64 x 70 inches -
Deborah Dancy
All Things Are Not Considered, 2017oil on canvas
64 x 70 inches
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60 x 50
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56 x 50
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48 x 54
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48 x 48
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40 x 38
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34 x 36
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Works on Paper 30 x 30
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30 x 22
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How Deep is the Ocean Series Works on Paper
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Cipher Series
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CAMEO Series
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Currier and Ives Series
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Photography
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Sculpture
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Exhibitions
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Deborah Dancy
Body of Evidence 30 April - 18 June 2022Bringing together multiple recently created bodies of work, Body of Evidence, Deborah Dancy's second solo show at the gallery, provides a comprehensive survey of Dancy’s explorations in various mediums including... -
WELCOME. BACK.
1 June - 2 September 2021Welcome back to the gallery! Come visit our new space in the Miami Circle Art District. The inaugural exhibition features work by longtime gallery artists as well as some new... -
The Edge Of Time
Deborah Dancy 9 January - 2 February 2019
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DEBORAH DANCY ARTIST TALK
Body of Evidence | April 30 - June 18, 2022 -
Press
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Review: Deborah Dancy in Arts ATL
May 10, 2022Deborah Dancy: Body Of Evidence Review: Multifaceted Black artist Deborah Dancy delivers powerful sucker punch Deborah Dancy: Body of Evidence , at Marcia Wood Gallery through June 18, is an... -
Deborah Dancy in ArtPulse
'It's a constant struggle to keep the 'thingness' at bay': an interview with Deborah Dancy Although her art is thoroughly abstract, Deborah Dancy’s paintings, drawings, and works in other mediums... -
Deborah Dancy in The Bottom Line
June 26, 2013Currently on view until June 29 at Sears Peyton Gallery is a collection of luminescent paintings and drawings in the exhibition Deborah Dancy: Chasing the Light. The entire exhibition, including... -
Deborah Dancy in The Paris Review
June 22, 2017The Bookness of Not-Books I once owned a hardback edition of Somerset Maugham’s The Moon and Sixpence that had served time at the top of a bedside pile; its cover... -
Deborah Dancy in Two Coats of Paint
June 1, 2013Triangular: Andrew Seto and Deborah Dancy Isoceles, equilateral, scalene, right, obtuse, acute and equilateral. The humble triangles that we all studied in geometry figure prominently in contemporary abstraction, particularly in...
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