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Marisol's
Biography
(Continued)
Encouraged by her father
to pursue her interest in art, Marisol moved to Paris to study for a year
in 1949. At the prestigious Ecole des Beaux Arts, she was instructed to
mimic the painting style of Pierre Bonnard. In search of more creative
approaches, Marisol moved to New York City in 1950. During that year,
Marisol took art instruction from decorative painter Yasuo Kuniyoshi at
New Yorks Art Students League. From 1951 to 1954 she took courses
at the New School for Social Research while studying under her most influential
mentor, the so-called dean of Abstract Expressionism, Hans
Hofmann. At Hofmanns schools in Greenwich Village and Provincetown,
Massachusetts, Marisol became acquainted with notions of the "push
and pull" dynamic: of forcing dichotomies between raw and finished
states. During this period, Marisol was introduced to the Cedar Street
Tavern, the chief watering hole for many of the leading Abstract Expressionists
with whom Marisol became friends, particularly Willem de Kooning.
Marisols discovery
and subsequent study of Pre-Columbian artifacts in 1951 led to her abandoning
traditional painting by 1954. She turned to terracotta, wood and fabricated
sculpture. Although largely self-taught, Marisol took a clay course at
the Brooklyn Museum Art School. She also learned plaster casting techniques
from sculptor William King. Marisol shared Kings fascination with
early American Primitive pieces like a coffee grinder in the shape of
a man and wooden figures on wheels. Marisol took printers type cases
and placed small terracotta figures in the openings. These votive works
(first exhibited at the Tanager Gallery, an artists co-op effort, in a
group show that included King and Alex Katz) caught the eye of Leo Castelli.
Leo Castelli Gallery featured Marisols Pre-Columbian art-inspired
carvings of animals and totemic figures in her first one-person exhibition
in 1958.
Grave self-doubt
followed Marisols initial success and exposure with the Castelli
show and she left New York to live for a year in Italy in 1959. In Rome
she studied the works of the Renaissance masters while she re-evaluated
her own work and artistic goals. Feeling creatively freed, Marisol returned
to New York to produce an impressive body of work that led to many important
exhibitions and the acquisition of her work for the collections of leading
museums. With the honing of her woodcarving skills, Marisol began to establish
her identity in an era dominated by Abstract Expressionist painters, such
as Jackson Pollock and de Kooning. The heavy seriousness of this movement
prompted Marisol to seek humor in her own work, which was essentially
carved and drawn-on self-portraiture. She expanded her range of materials
with the inclusion of found objects (often including her own clothing)
a practice found in the historic sculptures and collages of Picasso
as well as the more contemporary combines of Robert Rauschenberg.
In the following decade of the sixties, Marisol found herself in the sympathetic
company of Pop artists Roy Lichtenstein and Andy Warhol, despite the fact
that she rarely used strictly commercial items in her works. Marisol participated
in two of Warhols movies The Kiss and 13 Most Beautiful Girls.
Exploiting the banality of popular culture was not the sole focus of Marisols
work: wry social observation and satire have always been integral to her
sculptures. As the only female artist within the Pop enclave, she managed
to infuse a great deal of individuality in her sculptures usually
through the means of inserting or adopting different identities. One of
her most well known works of this period was The Party, a life-size group
installation of figures at the Sidney Janis Gallery. All the figures,
gathered together in various guises of the social elite, sported Marisols
face. It is intriguing to note that Marisol dropped her family surname
of Escobar in order to divest herself of a patrilineal identity and to
"stand out from the crowd."
Throughout
the sixties and seventies, Marisol expanded her range of subject matter
to include many sculptural portraits of friends, families, world leaders
and famous artists. The social and political upheavals of the late 1960s
upset Marisol, who had participated in an anti-Vietnam War march. During
1968 Marisol left for what was to be a months break that turned
into almost two years of world travel. While in Tahiti, Marisol learned
to scuba dive. She became enamored with the floating non-human environment
of the sea as an antidote to terrestrial turmoil. Marisol did scuba diving
in every ocean around the world from 1968 to 1972. She was discouraged
from continuing when a friend suffered a stroke while diving. Experiences
with the underwater world inspired Marisol to create a series of stained,
polished, mahogany fish forms to which the artists face was attached.
She liked the dangerous and beautiful fish - especially shark and barracuda,
which she likened to missiles.
The artist has also illuminated tragic human conditions by focusing on
various disadvantaged or minority groups such as Dust Bowl migrants, Father
Damien (depicted with the marks of leprosy), poor Cuban families and Native
Americans. These subjects set her work apart from the commercially derived
imagery that formed the basis of Pop art. In recent years, Marisol received
a letter from a Native American group requesting submissions for graphic
work. Out of several artists asked, she was the only artist to respond.
This initial contact led to her creation of a large body of work based
on Native Americans and an exhibition of this work as the United States
contribution to the Seville Fair in Spain.
Motivated by her admiration for da Vinci as an artist rather than any
religious feeling, Marisol executed sculptural renditions of Leonardo
da Vincis Last Supper as well as The Virgin with St. Anne in the
1980s. Marisol based her interpretation of the Last Supper on the original
version by da Vinci in which a dagger appeared held by a disembodied hand
(later painted out in da Vincis Last Supper).
Marisol has consistently participated in numerous one-person and group
exhibitions since the first momentous exhibition at the Castelli Gallery.
The Castelli Gallery, Sidney Janis Gallery and currently the Marlborough
Gallery have represented her at various points in her career. Marisol
became an American citizen in 1963, yet was chosen to represent Venezuela
in the 1968 Venice Biennale. Joan Mondale chose work by Marisol for the
Vice Presidential mansion in Washington, DC during her husbands
tenure. Her public installations and commissions include the American
Merchant Mariners Memorial in Promenade Battery Park of the Port
of New York. To be close to the site of the project, she rented an apartment
near the docks in Battery Park area to work on the piece. (An inveterate
world traveler, she has found that new environments can be discovered
in a mere five-minute walk from her TriBeCa studio.) Marisol also designed
stage sets for Martha Grahams The Eyes of the Goddess, performed
in 1992 at City Center Theater in New York.
The
artist has received Honorary Doctorates in the Arts from Moore College
of Art in Philadelphia, Rhode Island School of Design and New York State
University. Her works are featured in major American public collections
including the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art
in New York and the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington,
DC. Marisol is included in numerous public collections in other countries
such as the Galeria de Arte Nacional and the Museo De Arte Contemporaneo
in Caracas, Venezuela, the Wallraf-Richartz Museum in Cologne, Germany
and the Tokushima Modern Art Museum in Japan.
Jean
Westmacott, Director
Mary Beth Looney, Assistant Curator
Brenau University Galleries
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