Elaine de Kooning - Selected Group Exhibitions

Selected Group Exhibitions

  • 1951, 1953-1957: 9th Street Art Exhibition, the first “New York Painters and Sculptors Annual Exhibition” and subsequent 5 New York Artists’ Annual Exhibitions, Stable Gallery, NYC;
  • 1956: “Abstract Expressionism”, circ., by the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota; “Young American Painters”, circ., The Museum of Modern Art, NYC; “Pittsburgh International”, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh;
  • 1958: “Action Painting, 1958”, The Dallas Contemporary, Dallas, Texas;
  • 1960: “Abstract Expressionists Painting of the Fifties”, The Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota;
  • 1961: The Whitney Museum of American Art Annuals and Biennials, NYC;
  • 1964: “67th Annual American Exhibition: Directions in Contemporary Painting and Sculpture”, The Art Institute of Chicago;
  • 1980: “The Fifties: Aspects Painting in New York”, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.; "Heads: An Exhibit of Portraits", C. Grimaldis Gallery, Baltimore, Maryland.
  • 1990: “East Hampton Avant-Garde, A Salute to the Signa Gallery”, Guild Hall Museum, East Hampton, New York.

Read more about this topic:  Elaine De Kooning

Famous quotes containing the words selected and/or group:

    There is no reason why parents who work hard at a job to support a family, who nurture children during the hours at home, and who have searched for and selected the best [daycare] arrangement possible for their children need to feel anxious and guilty. It almost seems as if our culture wants parents to experience these negative feelings.
    Gwen Morgan (20th century)

    He hung out of the window a long while looking up and down the street. The world’s second metropolis. In the brick houses and the dingy lamplight and the voices of a group of boys kidding and quarreling on the steps of a house opposite, in the regular firm tread of a policeman, he felt a marching like soldiers, like a sidewheeler going up the Hudson under the Palisades, like an election parade, through long streets towards something tall white full of colonnades and stately. Metropolis.
    John Dos Passos (1896–1970)