Burton Wasserman
Burton Wasserman was born in Brooklyn, NY in 1929. He studied painting with Ad Reinhart and Burgoyne Diller at Brooklyn College, graduating in 1950. He formed strong friendships with both of these artists and developed a life-long passion for abstract art.
Whilst pursuing a career as an art professor, writer, and critic, Wasserman has continued actively to produce paintings, prints and sculpture. In his work of the 1960s the influence of the DeStijl movement, and consequently that of Reinhardt and Diller, is most strongly felt - simple geometric shapes, the use of only primary colours, and images reduced to a bare minimum. Through the years Wasserman's work has subtly evolved, always remaining abstract, at times moving into a more painterly approach, and at other times more geometrical but with a wider range of colours.
Wasserman�s work has appeared in more than forty solo exhibitions over the years. He has authored five books and hundreds of magazine articles about artists and their works. His art criticism and commentary appear regularly in Prime Time Arts and Entertainment and the monthly Delaware Valley journal Art Matters. He has exhibited widely, and his work is in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art; New Jersey State Museum, Trenton; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart; and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, amongst others.
In 2004, he retired as Professor of Art from Rowan University in Glassboro, NJ, where he taught courses in printmaking, painting, design, art education, modern art and art appreciation over a 44-year career. Active as a board member of numerous local and national art associations.
�My work is essentially metaphorical,� says Wasserman, �Each painting is a picture of itself. Each is the accumulation of a half century of inquiry, impulses, feelings and observation coming out of layers of experiences gathered over time.�
Whilst pursuing a career as an art professor, writer, and critic, Wasserman has continued actively to produce paintings, prints and sculpture. In his work of the 1960s the influence of the DeStijl movement, and consequently that of Reinhardt and Diller, is most strongly felt - simple geometric shapes, the use of only primary colours, and images reduced to a bare minimum. Through the years Wasserman's work has subtly evolved, always remaining abstract, at times moving into a more painterly approach, and at other times more geometrical but with a wider range of colours.
Wasserman�s work has appeared in more than forty solo exhibitions over the years. He has authored five books and hundreds of magazine articles about artists and their works. His art criticism and commentary appear regularly in Prime Time Arts and Entertainment and the monthly Delaware Valley journal Art Matters. He has exhibited widely, and his work is in the collections of the Philadelphia Museum of Art; New Jersey State Museum, Trenton; Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart; and the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, amongst others.
In 2004, he retired as Professor of Art from Rowan University in Glassboro, NJ, where he taught courses in printmaking, painting, design, art education, modern art and art appreciation over a 44-year career. Active as a board member of numerous local and national art associations.
�My work is essentially metaphorical,� says Wasserman, �Each painting is a picture of itself. Each is the accumulation of a half century of inquiry, impulses, feelings and observation coming out of layers of experiences gathered over time.�
late 1950s graphite & colour pencil on tracing paper 27.9 x 30.5 cm |
late 1950s Untitled - Pink, Yellow, Blue/Gray, Black & White graphite & colour pencil on tracing paper with collage 34.9 x 43.2 cm |
1953 Composition oil on canvas 47.6 x 31.9 cm |
1960s Construction Theme Development silkscreen 60.3 x 45.7 cm |
1960s Construction, Blue, Gray, Red, and Black silkscreen 17.8 x 24.1 cm |
c1960s Idea colour pencil & board construction 33 x 24 cm |
c1960s Untitled - Black & Gray colour pencil on paper 35.6 x 27.9 cm |
c1960s Untitled - Red colour pencil on paper 20.3 x 25.4 cm |
early 1960s Transformation collage of silkscreened sheets on red paper 43.2 x 48.3 cm |
1961 Construction Theme Variation graphite & colour pencil on tracing paper 30.5 x 35.6 cm |
1962 Untitled graphite & colour pencil on tracing paper 5.5 x 19.1 cm |
1962 Was, Is, and Ever Shall Be acrylic on masonite 81.3 x 61 cm |
1963 Construction, Black and White Counterpoint silkscreen 49.5 x 35.6 cm |
1964 Squares/Cross pen & ink on artist's board 24.8 x 24.8 cm |
1966 Untitled (Red, Blue, Black) oil on masonite 9 x 12 in |
1967 Study for Construction Concept cloured pencil on paper 35.6 c 27.9 cm |
1967 Construction Concept silkscreen 26 x 18.7 cm |
1967 Number Thirty Four silkscreen 27.9 x 22.9 cm |
1967 Study for Number 34 crayon on paper 20.3 x 28 cm |
1967 Study for Number Forty crayon on paper 25.4 x 19.1 cm |
1967 Untitled - Diamond colour pencil on tracing paper 22.2 x 20.3 cm |
1967 Untitled - Blue colour pencil on acetate 26 x 22.2 cm |
1967 Untitled - Red and Black colour pencil on paper 26 x 22.9 cm |
1967 (title unknown) |
1968 Construction Theme Development oil on wood construction 27 x 19.1 x 5.1 cm |
1969 "1969-P-NN" oil on canvas 76.4 x 45.7 cm |
1972-73 (title unknown) silkscreen |
1989 Morphic Iconography, The Origins Laid Bare oil on board 73.4 x 86.4 cm |
1996 At Different Stages In Life acrylic on card 39.4 x 29.2 cm |
2006 Blues oil on canvas composition stock card 26.7 x 24.1 cm |
2007 Monument in Progress oil on board 45.7 x 55.9 cm |
(date unknown) Construction in Black and Blue |
(date unknown) bwyellowsquare |
Ashcan School - Everett Shinn part 3
Everett Shinn (1876 - 1953) was an American realist painter and member of the Ashcan School, also known as 'the Eight.' He was the youngest member of the group of modernist painters who explored the depiction of real life. He is most famous for his numerous paintings of New York and the theatre, and of various aspects of luxury and modern life inspired by his home in New York City.
For biographical notes on Shinn see part 1. For earlier works by Shinn see parts 1 - 2 also. This is part 3 of a 3-part post on the works of Everett Shinn. After a short break, the next Ashcan School artist featured will be George Bellows.
1920 Punch and Judy pencil, charcoal, watercolour & gouache on paperboard 33 x 24.8 cm |
1921 Ladies on a Swing oil on canvas 149.7 x 59.7 cm |
1924 Masquerade pastel on paper |
1925 Curtain Call oil on canvas 23.1 x 28.2 cm |
1927 Untitled pencil, watercolour & carbon pencil on paperboard 50.7 x 74 cm |
1933 Dancers Backstage |
1934 Nightclub Scene oil on canvas 91.4 x 8.46 cm |
1937 French Vaudeville oil on canvas 63.8 x 76.5 cm |
1940 graphite sketch |
c1940 Clown with Drum oil on board 29.8 x 27.3 cm |
1942 Clown with Big Pants oil on canvas 30.5 x 25.4 cm |
1942 Street Scene, Paris pastel on board 36 x 46 cm |
c1945 Washington Square oil on canvas 95.2 x 105.4 cm |
1948 Drawing for "David Copperfield" A Light Shines my Way ink on paper 16.2 x 9.2 cm |
1948 Drawing for David Copperfield Visits Steerforth at his Home Again ink on paper 41.9 x 24.2 cm |
1950 Figure ink & pencil on paper 20 x 15 cm |
1950 Little Theater pencil & watercolour |
1952 Before the Flatiron Building was Built pastel, charcoal & watercolour on paperboard 27.6 x 37.4 cm |
Ballet Dancer pastel 22.9 x 14.8 cm |
Ballet |
Bob Cratchitt's Wife with Toys (illustration from Dickens' A Christmas Carol) ink on paper 26.7 x 31.8 cm |
Cane Man (illustration from Dickens' A Christmas Carol) ink on paper 48.3 x 29.2 cm |
Christmas Wreath (illustration from Dickens' A Christmas Carol) ink on paper |
Jumping the Hole in the Ice (illustration for Peter Rabbit) ink on paper 40.6 x 29.2 cm |
Kitchen at Bob Cratchitt's (illustration from Dickens' A Christmas Carol) ink on paper 39.4 x 19.4 cm |
Masquerade pastel on paper 77.5 x 53.6 cm |
Rabbits at Home (illustration for Peter Rabbit) ink on paper 23.2 x 34.3 cm |
Rabbits in Formal Attire (illustration for Peter Rabbit) ink on paper 25.4 x 40.6 cm |
Saturday Night pastel on paper |
Seated Nude conte� crayon & watercolour 21.6 x 19.1 cm |
The Hatpin sanguine on paper 31.9 x 45 cm |
The Mirror sanguine on paper 31.8 x 44.9 cm |
The Revue |
The Slattern Maid (Miss Slowboy) ink on paper 24.8 x 7 cm |
Untitled (Illustration for Dicken's Cricket on the Hearth) ink on paper 29.8 x 21.6 cm |
Woman Combing her Hair sanguine on paper 31.8 x 45 cm |
Woman Getting into Bed sanguine on paper 31.8 x 45.1 cm |
Woman in a Bed sanguine on paper 31.9 x 43.9 cm |
Woman with Fox Collar sanguine on paper 31.9 x 44.9 cm |
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