词条 | Kevin Larmee |
释义 |
| name = Kevin Larmee | image = | caption = | birth_name = | birth_date = {{Birth year and age|1946}} | birth_place = Ridgefield Park, New Jersey | death_date = | death_place = | nationality = American | ethnicity = | field = Painting | training = Shimer College San Francisco Art Institute | movement = Neo-expressionism Street art | works = | patrons = | awards = | spouse = | children = | website = {{URL|http://www.larmee.org/|larmee.org}} }} Kevin Larmee (born 1946)[1] is an American painter, best known for his association with the East Village art movement in New York City in the 1980s. Early lifeLarmee was born in Ridgefield Park, New Jersey, and raised in a suburb of Chicago, Illinois.[2] He attended Shimer College, then located in Mount Carroll, Illinois, from 1965 to 1967, attended the San Francisco Art Institute from 1967 to 1968, and returned to Shimer for the 1969-1970 academic year.[3] He and his wife, Susan Isono, moved to New York City in 1979, living in SoHo with their son, Blaise Larmee, who was born in 1985.[1] CareerPaintingIn the early 1980s, the art scene in New York City began to shift from the SoHo neighborhood to the grittier East Village, with the opening of many new galleries there.[4] In 1984, feeling that his work was not getting enough attention from the art world, Larmee started pasting his large painted murals outdoors, in the middle of the night, on the walls of buildings mostly near art centers around Lower Manhattan.[5][6][7] He would check in on them frequently for maintenance against the elements, and graffiti writers.[2] The paintings would sometimes stay up for months before being removed or defaced.[6][8] Larmee soon began getting gallery exhibits in New York and elsewhere in the US, while continuing to create street art.[4][5][7] Larmee became part of a movement of established gallery artists creating street art.[2] He was represented by the Avenue B Gallery on the Lower East Side for several years in the 1980s. The gallery closed near the end of the decade.[6][8][9] Larmee had prints in the Brooklyn Museum's 24th National Print Exhibition, Public and Private: American Prints Today, that traveled to various museums around the country in 1986.[10] His 1985 lithograph Cigarette is part of the Brooklyn Museum's permanent collection,[11] and he also has pieces in the permanent collections of the Grand Rapids Art Museum, Indianapolis Museum of Art and Toledo Museum of Art, among others.[12] In 1989, Larmee and his family moved to Chicago, where he continues to paint.[13] StyleLarmee's paintings of the 1980s were often set in nighttime urban environments, placing one or two solitary individuals on deserted streets or subway platforms,[5] or in front of glowing bodies of water,[14] juxtaposing the minimal figures with sharp colors and layers of patterns.[13] His technique has been described as "loosely brushed and coarsely textured."[5] The New York Times wrote in 1986 that his paintings of moments on a subway platform "vibrate with the concentrated energy of moving trains."[4] Indicative of his street pieces is Blonde with Cigarette, which shows a man standing, holding a cigarette, his empty eyes staring at the ground, with the New York skyline behind him.[7] Influenced by impressionism, his canvases were often heavily painted and textured, with flattened-out figures, and a controlled composition.[6][15] Exhibitions (selected)
References1. ^1 James Sheehan, "Larmee: in from the street," East Informer, October 1985. 2. ^1 2 Jonathan Mandell, "Urban Artifacts," New York Daily News, August 18, 1985. 3. ^{{Cite web|url=https://ir.stonybrook.edu/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11401/2953/Art_Piece_107.pdf?sequence=1|title=Eight Urban Painters: Contemporary Artists of the East Village|publisher=The Fine Arts Center Art Gallery (SUNY Stony Brook)|page=5|date=1986-07-09|accessdate=2014-12-18}} 4. ^1 2 Helen A. Harrison, "Urban Anxieties Reflected In Paintings From East Village," New York Times, August 17, 1986. 5. ^1 2 3 Victoria Donohoe, “Show Emphasizes New Genre Painting,” Philadelphia Inquirer, October 18, 1986. 6. ^1 2 3 Stephanie Arena, "Kevin Larmee," Pulp, July/August 1990. 7. ^1 2 Matthew Rose, "Kevin Larmee," Arts Magazine, May 1986. 8. ^1 Robyn Perry, “Private Eye,” Artillery Magazine, Vol. 3, No. 3, January/February 2009. 9. ^Carter Ratcliff, "The Art of Innocence," Elle, Volume II, Number 6, February 1987. 10. ^[https://www.brooklynmuseum.org/opencollection/exhibitions/770/National_Print_Exhibition_24th_Biennial%3A_Public_and_Private%3A_American_Prints_Today “Exhibitions: National Print Exhibition, 24th Biennial: Public and Private: American Prints Today,”] Brooklyn Museum, February 7, 1986. 11. ^Cigarette, Brooklyn Museum. Accessed May 27, 2014. 12. ^Museum References for Kevin Larmee, askart.com. Retrieved May 27, 2014. 13. ^1 Barbara B. Buchholz, “Elke Claus’ Vivid ‘Information’,” Chicago Tribune, April 18, 1997. 14. ^Lynn Snowden, "Luminescence Through Darkness," East Village Eye, November 1985. 15. ^Jacqueline Hall, "Divergent Lancaster shows reveal three faces of art," The Columbus Dispatch, July 20, 1986. External links
13 : Living people|1946 births|20th-century American painters|American male painters|21st-century American painters|Artists from New York City|Artists from Chicago|People from Ridgefield Park, New Jersey|Shimer College alumni|San Francisco Art Institute alumni|American Expressionist painters|Street artists|American graffiti artists |
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