DEE SHAPIRO
In The Beginning... Selections
From 1974 through 1980
On View March 31 through April 23, 2021
Artist Reception: Wednesday, March 31 from 4 to 7:00 PM
David Richard Gallery, LLC
211 East 121 ST | New York, NY 10035
P: (212) 882-1705
www.davidrichardgallery.com
Dee Shapiro’s earliest works were rigorously geometric, mostly organized on a grid using lines and points to move across her supports of canvas or paper. Influenced by years of sewing, knitting and needle work with her mother and grandmother, she was accustomed to counting and maintaining rigorous sequences and patterns top of mind and always in her sight line.
This presentation focuses on an interesting and important time in Shapiro’s career, the mid-to-late 1970s through 1981. During this period, she leveraged the organizational grids and mark making (like connecting loops of yarn in knitting or hooking and knotting a rug) with her love of lines (think of a grid, the warp and weft in weaving) and passion for color to aesthetically merge paint and textiles. Acrylic paint was not brushed or pulled with a palette knife on her canvases, instead, she extruded it directly from tubes though a small tip, painstakingly and drop-by-drop (a derivation of pointillism with a brief drag connecting to the next “point”), transforming the fluid medium into individual “knots” of pigment. The resulting surfaces were rich and lush, full of densely pixilated pigment, casting shadows and providing depth on the surface like a woven textile. The complex patterns were the product of her use of mathematical algorithms, like the Fibonacci Sequence. The paintings include: chevron patterns zig-zagging across the canvas; dizzying spirals; and elaborate short horizontal lines of the same length that also create vertical columns providing an overlay of another pattern of angled lines spanning from edge to edge diagonally across the canvases.
A similar process was used with watercolor markers and graph paper to create very complex layers and interacting structures of pattern-on-pattern in bold colors that contained: arrays of linear colored stripes with irregular voids of pigment that are reminiscent of punch cards in the early days of computers; chevron shapes contained within circular structures like wedges of a colorful pie; and the full spectrum of colors in a fluid serpentine shape that moves across the entire page creating circular shapes with quartered interior geometric designs.
Always drawing and working with pencil and line compositions, works on paper were and still are a staple and mainstay of Shapiro’s studio practice. Several spectacular, very detailed drawings with graphite and neutral-colored pencils on black construction paper will also be presented. These drawings are comprised of vertical and slightly angled hash marks laid down in grids to create arrays of horizontal lines contained within wider vertical columnar structures. Great examples of the repeating hash mark generating the strong horizontal lines while shifts in values and colors across the horizontals create the wider vertical columns that organizes the composition. Not quite a plaid, but an overlay of a pattern on a series of patterned marks that look like a woven wool textile.
The exhibition, In the Beginning… Selections From 1974 through 1981, will be on view March 31 through April 23, 2021 at David Richard Gallery located at 211 East 121 Street, New York, New York 10035, P: 212-882-1705 and everyone can interact and participate in the exhibition in several different ways: 1) in person and safely socially distanced while wearing a face covering; 2) privately by appointment; and 3) online at the following link: https://www.davidrichardgallery.com/exhibit/538-dee-shapiro to view the checklist, digital catalog, installation images as well as critical video discussions as they are posted.
About Dee Shapiro:
The Artist's Statement: As in a dream of alternative realities, absurd connections, or on a trip passing familiar landscapes in unfamiliar settings, new conscious and unconscious associations are brought to a two-dimensional surface in my work. In the recent pieces, geometry (seen even in the structure of organic forms) directs composition: arbitrary drops of color undermine control and create shapes that succumb to the overwork of drawings, rendering obsessive intricacies and paint applications to build the forms. Collaged materials add extraneous influences in a subtle blend.
In the beginning was pattern. First, the Fibonacci progression color coded on graph paper, a piece which landed in the Guggenheim Museum in NYC. Next, inclusion in the Pattern and Decoration (P & D) exhibition at PS1, followed by a series of work that included architectural elements "off the grid". With all the work, always color and a nod to the Albers' studies. A redirection to small horizontal paintings of the geometry in cities and landscapes ensued for a number of years.
Missing the early fascination and engagement with pattern led to more recent work exploring evocative biological and organic forms, the evolution of which is the more recent work as well as borrowing from sources that include other artist's work in a collaborative effort. In this new body of work, I am unflinchingly forging ahead to newly wrought terrain.
Recent Exhibitions and Select Collections: Dee Shapiro’s painting, Rotunda, 1980 was included in the Pattern and Decoration exhibition, With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985, organized by Anna Katz, Curator, with Rebecca Lowery, Assistant Curator at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles from October, 2019 through May, 2020.
Shapiro’s artworks are included in the permanent collections of many museums, foundations and private collections, including the following: Albright-Knox Museum, Buffalo, NY, Birmingham Museum of Art, Birmingham, AL, Chrysler Museum, Norfolk, VA, Citibank Collection, NYC, Dartmouth Museum of Art, Hanover, NH, Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, NY, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, NYC, Heckscher Museum, Huntington, NY, Hoffman-LaRoche Collection, Zurich, Switzerland, Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte, NC, Neuberger Museum, Purchase, NY, Newark Museum, Newark, NJ, New York University Collection, NYC, Oklahoma Art Center, Oklahoma City, OK, Owens-Corning Corp., Corning, NY, Pepsico Corporation, NY, Spencer Museum of Art, Lawrence, KS, United States Department of State, Washington, DC, University of Arkansas, Little Rock, AK and William Louis-Dreyfus Family Collection, Mount Kisco, NY, among numerous others.
About David Richard Gallery:
Since its inception in 2010, David Richard Gallery has produced museum quality exhibitions that feature Post War abstraction in the US. The presentations have addressed specific decades and geographies as well as certain movements and tendencies. While the gallery has long been recognized as an important proponent of post-1960s abstraction—including both the influential pioneers as well as a younger generation of practitioners in this field—in keeping with this spirit of nurture and development the gallery also presents established artists who embrace more gestural and representational approaches to the making of art as well as young emerging artists.
In 2015 David Richard Gallery launched DR Art Projects to provide a platform for artists of all stripes—international, national, local, emerging and established—to present special solo projects or to participate in unique collaborations or thematic exhibitions. The goal is to offer a fresh look at contemporary art practice from a broad spectrum of artists and presentations. The Gallery opened its current location in New York in 2017.
All Artwork Copyright © Dee Shapiro, Courtesy David Richard Gallery.
All photographs Yao Zu Lu
Associated Artist
Associated Exhibitions
- Dee Shapiro In The Beginning… Selections From 1974 through 1980
March 31, 2021 - April 23, 2021
Associated News
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June 19, 2023
Congratulations to Dee Shapiro, Recipient of A Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant
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April 27, 2022
Dee Shapiro Redrawn and Redressed
GalleriesNow
April 25, 2022
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April 24, 2022
Press Release - Dee Shapiro Redrawn and Redressed
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March 5, 2022
Two Centuries of Long Island Women Artists
Long Island Museum
March 3, 2022
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August 23, 2021
Dee Shapiro – From Fibonacci to Bathers
Art Spiel
Etty Yaniv
August 23, 2021
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June 30, 2021
Exhibitions at CCS Bard Explore Art at Its Most Intimate, Playful, and Defiant
Hyperallergic
by Bard College
June 30, 2021
June 29, 2021
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May 11, 2021
Dee Shapiro
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May 5, 2021
Can’t Find a Ticket to Frieze? Try a Satellite Fair
The New York Times
Martha Schwendener
May 5, 2021
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April 14, 2021
The Critic’s Notebook
On Nell Blaine, Dee Shapiro, Britain’s “Age of Decadence” & more from the world of culture.
James Panero
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March 30, 2021
Dee Shapiro: In The Beginning... Selections From 1974 through 1980
GalleriesNow
March 30, 2021
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March 25, 2021
Press Release - Dee Shapiro
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September 26, 2019
With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972–1985 at MOCA LA
ArtFix Daily
September 25, 2019
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September 18, 2019
David Richard Gallery presents Dee Shapiro's Snatched and Reworked
Art & Object
September 18, 2019
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September 18, 2019
Dee Shapiro, "Snatched and Reworked", exhibition opens at David Richard Gallery New York
ArtDaily.org
September 18, 2019
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September 14, 2019
Dee Shapiro 18 Sep — 19 Oct 2019 at the David Richard Gallery
Wall Street International Magazine
September 14, 2019
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September 4, 2019
Dee Shapiro: Snatched and Reworked
GalleriesNow.net
September 4, 2019
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August 24, 2019
Press Release - Dee Shapiro "Snatched and Reworked"