Image: Judd Foundation to present 'Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966'
Rosemarie Castoro, Red Blue Green Purple, 1964, acrylic on canvas, 84 x 83 3/4 inches. Photo © Estate of Rosemarie Castoro. Courtesy Thaddaeus Ropac gallery, London・Paris・Salzburg・Seoul. Art © Estate of Rosemarie Castoro.
Museum Exhibition

Judd Foundation to present 'Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966' Curated by Flavin Judd

20 Avril—24 Juin 2023
Judd Foundation, New York

 Judd Foundation will present Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966 at 101 Spring Street in New York. Curated by Flavin Judd, Artistic Director of Judd Foundation, and organized in partnership with the Rosemarie Castoro Estate, and Thaddaeus Ropac gallery. 

The works in Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966 reflect Castoro’s primary formal interests of the mid-1960s which art historian Tanya Barson has described as the exploration of, “simple and direct compositions of bold, flat, shapes isolated on an unmodulated ground.” The serial permutations of paintings, such as Red Blue Green Purple, 1964, can be viewed as abstract forms or signs with a choreographic orientation that are articulated in infinitely repeated patterns. Castoro, like Donald Judd, rejected the oversimplification of an artist’s work into categories. Instead, she worked across mediums while maintaining a lifelong commitment to abstraction. Castoro’s paintings from this time precede her later work in performance, poetry, and what she called “paintingsculpture” and “sculptural drawing.” Of note are her freestanding walls, such as Foyer from 1971, a work in gesso and graphite on multiple Masonite panels that directly engage sculpture and architecture. In the late 1970s, her sculptural work took on totemic qualities as seen in a body of work titled Flashers, which included a permanent installation of a large-scale outdoor work in concrete.

Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966 situates Castoro’s work within the context of the radical dance practices of Simone Forti and Yvonne Rainer, and the experimentation of visual artists Louise Bourgeois, Eva Hesse, and Agnes Martin. Accompanying the exhibition is a newly commissioned text by Rachel Stella, contributor to the exhibition catalogue for Rosemarie Castoro. Focus at Infinity at the Barcelona Museum of Contemporary Art (MACBA).

In conjunction with the exhibition, Judd Foundation will host a conversation between Wendy Perron and Yvonne Rainer at 101 Spring Street on Wednesday, May 10 at 6:00pm which will explore the relationship between dance and visual arts in the 1960s.

Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966 is part of Judd Foundation’s ongoing exhibition series in New York. Since 2015, the Foundation has organized exhibitions of works by Alvar Aalto, John Chamberlain, Dan Flavin, Felix Gonzalez-Torres, Donald Judd, Yayoi Kusama, Richard Long, David Novros, James Rosenquist, Lauretta Vinciarelli, and Meg Webster. These exhibitions continue a practice begun by Judd of using the ground floor as a public exhibition space.

Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966 is made possible with support from Thaddaeus Ropac gallery. Additional support provided Catherine Walsh.

 

Rosemarie Castoro: Paintings 1964-1966
20 April—24 June 2023
Public hours: Thursday—Saturday, 1:00–5:00pm

Judd Foundation
101 Spring Street, New York NY 10012
Telephone 212 219 2747 
juddfoundation.org

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