Louise Nevelson (1899 -
1988) was born in Kiev, Russia and immigrated to Rockland, Maine
at the age of six. Following her marriage in 1920, Nevelson moved to New York City where she
later studied at the Art Students League (1929-30) under the tutelage of Kenneth
Hayes Miller. She continued her education by studying with Hans Hoffman in Munich and working as an assistant to Diego Rivera prior
to participating in her first group exhibition organized by the Secession
Gallery at the Brooklyn
Museum in 1935. As a part
of the Works Progress Administration, Nevelson taught art at the Education
Alliance School of Art (NY) and received her first solo exhibition at the
Nierendorf Gallery in New York City.
In the late 1940s and early 1950s, Nevelson worked at the Sculpture Center (NY)
and at Atelier 17; it was during the mid-Fifties that she produced her first
series of black wood landscape sculptures. Shortly thereafter, three New York City museums
acquired her work: the Whitney Museum of American Art purchased Black Majesty
(1956), The Brooklyn Museum purchased First Personage (1957), and The Museum of
Modern Art purchased Sky Cathedral (1958). In 1967, the Whitney Museum of
American Art (New York, NY) organized Nevelson's first retrospective, and her
work has been the subject of over 135 solo exhibitions including a posthumous
1994 retrospective organized by the Palazzo delle Esposizioni in Rome. During
the 1970s and early 1980s, Nevelson was occupied with numerous public
commissions and the production of large-scale sculpture and monumental
environments often using Cor-Ten steel. Invited to participate in an
international selection of group shows, Nevelson's work appeared in the
Pittsburgh International Exhibition at the Carnegie Institute (1958, 1961,
1964, 1970), the Venice Biennale (1962, 1976), Expo 1970 in Osaka, Japan,
Documenta III in Kassel (1964), the 1973 Biennial at the Whitney Museum of
American Art, and the Spoleto Festival (1982-83), among others.
Throughout her career,
Nevelson held numerous leadership positions within the arts community,
including: President of the Artist's Equity New York chapter (1957-9); two-time
President of National Artist's Equity (1962, 1963); first Vice-President of the
Federation of Modern Painters and Sculptors (1962); National Association of
Women Artists member (1962); Sculptor's Guild member (1962); participant in the
National Council on the Arts and Government, Washington, DC (1965); and
election to the American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York (1979). The
recipient of many awards, Nevelson received honorary degrees from Western College
for Women (Oxford, OH; 1966), Smith College (Northampton, MA; 1973), Columbia University
(New York, NY; 1977), and Boston
University (Boston, MA;
1978). In addition, institutions and organizations recognized Nevelson with
prizes including: Grand Prize for work in the Art USA exhibition at the New
York Coliseum (1959); the Logan Award for work shown in the 63rd American
Exhibition from The Art Institute of Chicago (1960); the MacDowell Colony Medal
(1969); the Brandeis University Creative Arts Award in Sculpture (1971); the
Skowhegan Medal for Sculpture (1971); and the President's Medal of the
Municipal Art Society of New York (1979).
Louise Nevelson's work can
be found internationally in over eighty public museum, university, corporate,
and municipal collections including: The Art Institute of Chicago; The Art
Museum, Princeton University (Princeton, NJ); The Brooklyn Museum; The Corcoran
Gallery of Art (Washington, DC); the William A. Farnsworth Library and Art
Museum (Rockland, ME); the Galleria Civica d'Arte Moderna e Contemporanea di
Torino (Turin, Italy); the Hara Museum of Contemporary Art (Tokyo, Japan); the
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (Washington, DC); the Israel Museum (Jerusalem,
Israel); the Julliard School of Music at Lincoln Center (New York, NY); the Los
Angeles County Museum of Art; the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art (Humlebæk,
Denmark); The Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, NY); The Montreal Museum of
Fine Arts (Montreal, Canada); the Musée national d'art moderne, Centre Georges
Pompidou (Paris, France); The Museum of Modern Art (New York, NY); the City of
New York; the Rijksmuseum Kröller-Müller (Otterlo, Netherlands); the Scottish
National Gallery of Modern Art (Edinburgh, Scotland); the City of Scottsdale,
Arizona; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (New York, NY); the Storm King Art
Center and Sculpture Park (Mountainville. NY); the Tate Gallery (London, England);
the Walker Art
Center (Minneapolis,
MN); and the Whitney
Museum of American Art (New York, NY).