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Lee Lozano
Lee Lozano 1971.jpg
Lozano in 1971
Born
Lenore Knaster

November 5, 1930
Died October 2, 1999(1999-10-02) (aged 68)

Lee Lozano (November 5, 1930 – October 2, 1999) was an American painter, and visual and conceptual artist.

Biography

Early years

Born Lenore Knaster in Newark, New Jersey, she started to use the name "Lee" at the age of fourteen, often preferring to go by the simpler, if more enigmatic "E". She attended the University of Chicago as an undergraduate from 1948 to 1951, studying philosophy and natural sciences, and received a B.A. She married Adrian Lozano, a Mexico-born architect, in 1956; they divorced four years later. During the marriage she earned a B.F.A. from the Art Institute of Chicago.

After traveling in Europe for a year, Lozano moved to New York City to pursue a career as an artist. She had her first exhibition at the Bianchini Gallery in New York in 1966. Many of her early paintings and drawings were done in a raw expressionistic style. ..... Lozano's art of this period is often compared to early works by Claes Oldenburg and late works by Philip Guston. In the late 1960s, she experimented with a more Minimalist aesthetic, creating monochromatic Wave paintings based on the physics of light.

Career as a conceptualist

Like many of her contemporaries, including Adrian Piper and Vito Acconci, Lozano began to pursue conceptual art projects starting in the mid-1960s. In February 1969 she commenced her General Strike Piece, in which she withdrew from the New York art world. Her instructions to herself were as follows: GRADUALLY BUT DETERMINEDLY AVOID BEING PRESENT AT OFFICIAL OR PUBLIC "UPTOWN" FUNCTIONS OR GATHERINGS RELATED TO THE "ART WORLD" IN ORDER TO PURSUE INVESTIGATIONS OF TOTAL PERSONAL AND PUBLIC REVOLUTION. EXHIBIT IN PUBLIC ONLY PIECES WHICH FURTHER SHARING OF IDEAS & INFORMATION RELATED TO TOTAL PERSONAL AND PUBLIC REVOLUTION. .....

In August 1971, she began another notorious work of refusal, Decide to Boycott Women. What began as a one-month experiment intended to improve communication with women wound up as a twenty-seven year hiatus from speaking or otherwise relating to them. Her systematic rejection of all members of her own gender lasted for the remainder of her life; she effectively cut off ties with friends, fellow artists, gallerists, and other women who had been long-time supporters of her art, including the feminist curator and art critic Lucy Lippard. Art historian and critic Helen Molesworth has noted that these two conceptual works signaled Lozano's simultaneous rejection of capitalism and patriarchy.

Notable Works

..... She began painting objects that identified with male power and productivity in 1963.

In 1967, the artist made a list of her titles of paintings called ‘ALL VERBS: REAM, SPIN, VEER, SPAN, CROSS, RAM, PEEL, CHARGE, PITCH, VERGE, SWITCH, SHOOT, SLIDE, JUT, HACK, BREACH, STROKE, STOP’. Her list is in advance of Richard Serra's ‘Verb List Compilation: Actions to Relate to Oneself’ from 1967 to 1968. The paintings were compositions of edges and spirals in greyscale.

Untitled (General Strike Piece), begun in 1969, in which she cut herself off from the commercial art world; and Boycott Piece, which began in 1971, as a month-long experiment intended to improve communication but became a permanent "boycott" of speaking to or directly interacting with women. She notes that “Dropout Piece is the hardest work I have ever done."

Final years

After being evicted from her studio loft on Grand & Green Street in SoHo, Lozano moved uptown to St. Nicholas Avenue until she moved to her parents' house in Dallas, Texas in 1982, culminating yet another project (Drop Out). ..... She was persuaded to allow several concurrent exhibitions of her work, three at SoHo galleries and one at the Wadsworth Atheneum, which revived her legacy just before her death in 1999 at the age of 68.

Interviewed in 2001, Lucy Lippard noted that "Lee was extraordinarily intense, one of the first, if not the first person (along with Ian Wilson) who did the life-as-art thing. The kind of things other people did as art, she really did as life—and it took us a while to figure that out."

Selected exhibitions

  • 1964, 1965 Green Gallery, group exhibitions, New York NY
  • 1966–67 [Solo Exhibitions], Bianchini Gallery, New York NY
  • 1969 "Language III", Dwan Gallery, New York NY; "Number 7", Paula Cooper Gallery, New York NY
  • 1970 [Solo Exhibition], Whitney Museum of American Art, New York NY
  • 1971 InfoFiction: Mezzanine Gallery, Nova Scotia School of Art and Design (NSCAD), Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • 1980 Works on View at Jack Shainman Gallery
  • 1998 "Lee Lozano/Matrix:135", Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford CT; "Early 60s", Mitchell Algus Gallery, New York NY; "Tool Paintings", Rosen & van Liere, New York NY; "Minimalism", Margarete Roeder Gallery, New York NY
  • 1999 "Afterimage: Drawing Through Process", Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles CA
  • 2003 "Transgressive Women: Yayoi Kusama, Lee Lozano, Ana Mendieta and Joan Semmel", Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art, The University of Texas, Austin TX
  • 2004 "Lee Lozano, Drawn from Life: 1961–1971", P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center, MoMA, Queens NY
  • 2007 "WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution, 1965–1980", Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles CA (traveling exhibition)
  • 2008 "Solitaire: Lee Lozano, Sylvia Plimack Mangold and Joan Semmel", Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford CT (traveling exhibition)

See also

Kids robot.svg In Spanish: Lee Lozano para niños

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