Eleanore Mikus

Eleanore Mikus

Mikus in the 1960s
Born (1927-07-25) July 25, 1927
Nationality American
Known for Conceptual art, Humanist
Awards Guggenheim Fellow

Eleanore Mikus (born July 25, 1927 in Detroit, Michigan) is an American artist who began painting in the late 1950s in the Abstract Expressionist mode. By the early 1960s, she was creating monochromatic paintings with geometric patterns that according to Luis Camnitzer, “could be seen as conforming to the Minimalist aesthetic of the era while emphatically contradicting that style’s emotional distance and coldness.” [1]:2 In 1969, she began painting simple, cartoon-like images in bold, colorful strokes that anticipated Neo-Expressionism of the early 1980s.[2] In the mid-1980s, Mikus resumed creating her abstract works. Since 1961, she has also been creating works of folded paper in which the “folds” make lines or textures that become integral to the material itself.[3]

Life

Mikus was born in Detroit. She was drawn to art at an early age winning an art prize in kindergarten and attending art classes at the School of Arts and Crafts in Detroit while in high school. After three years at Michigan State University, majoring in art and art history, Mikus left in 1950 to travel in Germany and Austria. She returned to the United States in 1953 and completed her undergraduate degree in art and art history at the University of Denver in 1957. In 1959, she took classes at the Art Students League and New York University and later completed an M.A. in Asian Art History at the University of Denver in 1967. Mikus lived in New York City from 1960–1972 and again from 1977-1979. She began teaching at Cooper Union in New York in 1971. From 1973-1976, she taught and lived in England. In 1979, she moved to Ithaca, New York, while still maintaining her studio in New York City. Mikus taught at Cornell University until she retired in 1994.

Career

Mikus had her first solo exhibition at the Pietrantonia Gallery in New York in 1960. She showed paintings of geometric shapes on sectional canvases to allow the real lines of the joined canvases to interact with the painted shapes on the surfaces. In 1963, she exhibited at Pace Gallery in Boston. Later in New York City, she was making monochromatic works of black, white, and gray painted on uneven supports made from pieces of wood fitted together. Thickly painted and sanded many times so that the color became like a skin molded by and integral to the bumpy structure beneath, these works, called Tablets are distinguished by a play of light and shadow on the surfaces that provides an organic sense of movement.[1]:4 Her show at Pace Gallery also coincided with the beginning of her “paperfolds” (the term she uses for her works of folded paper). When asked to design an announcement for the show in N.Y.C., she spontaneously made seven folds on a sheet a paper, opened it up and handed it over as the flyer.[1]:5 From that point on, folding paper became an important part of her creative process.

In 1964, Mikus showed with Pace Gallery in New York City. Her work was gaining recognition and Dorothy Miller, well-known curator, chose a white Tablet painting for the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, as a gift from Louise Nevelson. In 1966, Mikus won a Guggenheim Fellowship.

In the late 1960s, as Minimalism was gaining popularity, Mikus changed the direction of her work dramatically. According to Robert Hobbs, she was “opting for [a] new freedom,” and began making cartoon-like paintings of boats, planes, trains, and dragons.[3]:25 Again, many saw her work as ahead of its time as she created these figurative images. The work was seen by some as drawing upon the Eastern philosophies of koans (riddles), in which she drew upon the humanist style of art. Ivan Karp from OK Harris Gallery showed her work and Mikus had four solo shows, in 1971, 72, 73, and 74. These paintings bear resemblance to Neo-Expressionist painting but pre-date them. Hobbs associates them with similar directions taken by artists Alfred Leslie and Philip Guston, around the same time.

By the early 1980s, when Neo-Expressionism was at the height of its popularity, Mikus returned to making abstract works, working on canvas and developing her paperfolds to a larger scale. In 2006-2007, she had an important exhibition at The Drawing Center, New York, NY, in which she showed 150 works dating from 1959-2006.

Influences

Mikus felt a close affinity to many artists who aspire to a purified aesthetic realm, such as Ben Nicholson, Paul Klee, Albert Pinkham Ryder, Piet Mondrian and Kasimir Malevich, and the drawings of Jean Auguste Dominique Ingres. She also respected the work of Louise Nevelson, Lucia Fontana, Ad Reinhardt, and Piero Manzoni. Her work has also been associated with the philosophy of Zen Buddhism which allows one to find universals in simple everyday activities.[3]:15 As Mikus states: “Starting with something small, just a line, and making something big – that’s what it’s all about. From just a small line, a fold, you can make the rest of your life. That’s what I have done.”[3]:31

Current

During 2011, Mikus was invited to be in a group show titled 43 Aspects of Drawing at the Rugby Art Gallery and Museum in Warwickshire, England. In 2010, Mikus had a group show at OK Harris Gallery in New York City. She also had another group show at the Zentral Bibliotrek of Zurich, Switzerland. During 2009, the Arnot Art Museum in Elmira, New York, showed Mikus' paintings and paperfolds in a three-person show titled Three Americans. In 2008 Mikus' paperfolds were shown in a solo show at the Marlborough Gallery in New York City. Also in 2008 her work was shown in a group show titled Folded, Torn, Cut, Woven, and Pulled at the Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas at Austin.

Mikus continues to work in New York City and upstate New York.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Camnitzer, Luis. Eleanore Mikus: From Shell to Skin, in Drawing Papers 65 (New York, NY: The Drawing Center, November 11, 2006—February 10, 2007. Edward Hallam Tuck Publication Program, 2007)
  2. Cohen, Mark Daniel, Eleanore Mikus, Review Magazine (November 1, 1998): 15.
  3. 1 2 3 4 Hobbs, Robert; Bernstock, Judith E. (1991). Eleanore Mikus: Shadows of the Real. Groton House in association with the University of Washington Press. ISBN 0-295-97116-9.

More References

  • Bell, Bower J. Paintings 1960's - 1990's, Mitchell Algus Gallery, and Works on Paper, Claudia Carr Gallery, Oct 14 - Nov 14, 1998, Review Magazine.
  • Bloch, Maurice E. Tamarind. A Renaissance of Lithography. 1971 Los Angeles' Tamarind Lithography Workshop.
  • Carlozzi, DiMeo Annette., Baum, Kelly. Ed. Blanton Museum of Art: American Art Since 1900. 2006, University of Texas Press, Austin, Texas.
  • Cohen, Mark Daniel. The Critical State of Visual Art in New York, Paintings 1960's–1990's, Mitchell Algus Gallery and Works on Paper 1960 - 1998, Claudia Carr Gallery Oct 14 - Nov 14, 1998, Review Magazine.
  • Goldsmith, Benedict. Women in Art, Potsdam, N.Y.: Art Gallery, 1972, Brainerd Hall, State University of New York College at Potsdam.
  • Leavitt, Thomas W. Women Artists: Selected Works from the Collection. Ithaca, N.Y.: 1983, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University.
  • Leavitt, Thomas W. 1981 Handbook of the Collections, Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University.
  • Spector, Buzz. Eleanore Mikus at the Drawing Center, New York. Art on Paper, March - April, Vol. 11, No. 4., 2007.
  • Thurion, Fearn C. American Art in the Newark Museum, 1981 The Newark Museum, Newark, N.J.
  • Weinhardt, Carl J. 1970 Painting and Sculpture Today. Indianapolis: Indianapolis Museum of Art.
  • Wesley, Laura. Eleanore Mikus. Q, A Journal of Art, July, pp. 28–31, 1988, Cornell University.

External links

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