Beatrice Mandelman
(American, 1912-1998)
Garden #8 1/2-C, c. 1994
acrylic on canvas
40 x 60 inches.
Provenance:
The Artist
The Estate of Beatrice Mandelman
203 Fine Art, Taos, New Mexico
This work is accompanied by a certificate of authenticity issued by the Mandelman-Ribak Collection
Lot essay:
I am a believer in the poetry of the subconscious moving into the realm of abstraction. My work could be called ‘subjective abstractions.’ I have the freedom of choice today to let my space flow. I make room in my painting for the observer to dream.
-Beatrice Mandelman, Mandelman Shows in Taos, 1977, Santa Fe New Mexican
A prolific painter throughout her life, Beatrice Mandelman, or “Bea,” knew she wanted to be a painter from an early age. Born in Newark, New Jersey in 1912, Mandelman was introduced at an early age to Russian Constructivism and other avant-garde movements by Louis Lozowick, an artist and family friend. She began taking classes at the age of 12 at the Newark School of Fine and Industrial Art and eventually studied at both Rutgers University and the New York Art Student’s League. From 1935 to 1942, Mandelman was employed by the Works Project Administration in New York, where she became associated with numerous New York School artists including Louis Lozowick, Willem de Kooning, Arshile Gorky, Jackson Pollock, and Stuart Davis. Although Mandelman’s style was to evolve over time, she remained committed to modernism and abstraction throughout her career.
In 1944, Mandelman and her husband, Louis Ribak, settled in Taos, New Mexico. She and Ribak became a part of the group of artists known as the Taos Moderns, which included Ed Corbett, Agnes Martin, Oli Sihvonen, and Clay Spohn. Far from the strictures of the New York art scene, Mandelman found the freedom to develop a style that was distinctly her own. Inspired by the light, the local color, the landscape and the confluence of diverse cultures in Taos, her work flourished. The artist moved away from her previous, Ashcan, social-inspired scenes of the WPA period and adopted a bright, expressive version of Abstract Expressionism, often working in series.
In her later works, Mandelman painted a number of diptychs and triptychs in several series, such as Jazz, Carnival, New York, Garden and Music. Garden #8 1/2-C, c. 1994, again reveals her gift at melding and fusing past and present modernist styles into her own unique language. The Garden and Music series are the most reductive of these later series, with large blocks of a limited color palette and generous use of black. These mature compositions are distinguished by a confident ebullience and bold, musical lyricism that is all the artist’s own.
Condition
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