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Jane Freilicher

Painter Among Poets

April 13 – June 14, 2013

Frank O'Hara 1951

Frank O'Hara
1951
oil on linen
65 x 23 inches
Private Collection

Untitled (Still Life with Copy of ARTnews)

Untitled (Still Life with Copy of ARTnews)
c.1963
pastel on paper
23 x 18 inches
Private Collection

Untitled (Landscape) 1953

Untitled (Landscape)
1953
brush and ink on paper
11 x 10 ½ inches

John Ashbery c.1954

John Ashbery
c.1954
pen and ink on paper
13 ¾ x 10 7/8 inches
Private Collection

Flowers 1977 pastel on paper

Flowers
1977
pastel on paper
14 x 12 inches

Abstract Landscape 1963

Abstract Landscape
1963
watercolor on paper
16 5/8 x 13 5/8 inches

Henry Ford's Dunes

Henry Ford's Dunes
1961
oil on canvas
25 x 30 inches
Private Collection

Peonies 1989 oil on paper

Peonies
1989
oil on paper
30 x 22 ¼ inches

Parts of a World

Parts of a World
1987
oil on linen
68 ½ x 53 inches
NFS

Untitled (Frank O’Hara)

Untitled (Frank O’Hara)
nd
pen and ink on paper
14 x 11 inches

John Ashbery c.1954

John Ashbery
c.1954
graphite on paper
16 ¾ x 13 7/8 inches
Private Collection

Casement Window 1974

Casement Window
1974
watercolor on paper
12 x 9 inches

Peonies 1965 oil on canvas

Peonies
1965
oil on canvas
24 x 24 inches
Private Collection

Portrait of John Ashbery

Portrait of John Ashbery
c. 1968
oil on canvas
20 ¼ x 18 inches
Private Collection

The Car 1963

The Car
1963
oil on linen
18 x 19 inches
Private Collection

House and Telephone Pole

House and Telephone Pole
c.1963
charcoal on paper
14 x 16 ½ inches

Turnaround 1965 oil on canvas

Turnaround
1965
oil on canvas
68 x 60 inches

Study in Blue and Gray

Study in Blue and Gray
2011
oil on linen
24 x 24 inches

Crosstown View 1978

Crosstown View
1978
pastel on paper
38 ¼ x 50 inches
Private Collection

Painter in the Studio

Painter in the Studio
1987
oil on canvas
60 x 40 inches

Pierrot and Peonies

Pierrot and Peonies
2007
oil on linen
36 x 32 inches
Private Collection

Nude on a Green Blanket

Nude on a Green Blanket
1967
oil on linen
25 x 30 inches

Jimmy Schuyler 1965

Jimmy Schuyler
1965
oil on canvas
30 x 24 inches

Early New York Evening

Early New York Evening
1954
oil on linen
51 ½ x 31 ¾ inches
Private Collection

Untitled (Frank O’Hara in Landscape)

Untitled (Frank O’Hara in Landscape)
c.1967
pencil on paper
11 ¾ x 8 ¾ inches

Portrait of Kenneth Koch

Portrait of Kenneth Koch
nd
pen and ink on paper
12 x 8 ¾ inches
Private Collection

Portrait of Kenneth Koch

Portrait of Kenneth Koch
c.1966
oil on linen
30 x 40 inches
Private Collection

Press Release

As a follow-up to the Tibor de Nagy Gallery’s 60th anniversary exhibition, “Painters and Poets,” the gallery is pleased to present Jane Freilicher Painter Among Poets. The exhibition coincides with National Poetry Month.

The exhibition will take the same format and approach as “Painters and Poets.” The exhibition will closely examine painter Jane Freilicher’s pivotal role among the poets of the New York School, particularly John Ashbery and Frank O’Hara, along with Kenneth Koch and James Schuyler. Freilicher was in many ways a catalytic and consequential presence. Unlike Larry Rivers or Grace Hartigan, who engaged in direct collaborations with the poets, Freilicher played a subtler, more nuanced role, one that is difficult to pin down precisely.

It will be the first exhibition to explore in depth Freilicher’s relationship to the poets and their work. It will comprise the artist’s paintings and works on paper, including portraits of the poets, many on loan and exhibited for the first time. It will also include a selection of original letters between Freilicher and the poets, as well as films, book covers, and photographs.

Freilicher, now 88, was not only the poets’ closest friend and confidante, she was also their muse. As has become clear in early correspondence, a selection of which will be exhibited for the first time, Ashbery and O’Hara regularly sought her advice for poems in process. Urbane, affectionate, and gossipy, the letters put the artist’s legendary wit on display.

O’Hara wrote his celebrated series of “Jane poems,” weaving her name into the titles. James Schuyler came up with the scenario for “Presenting Jane,” a short film starring Freilicher. A scene depicting Jane walking on water – a moment which became legendary among the group of poets – speaks to the esteem for which she was held. The film was never completed and what footage existed is now lost.

The gallery has been granted rare and historic access by the poets’ literary estates to letters, postcards, and original manuscript pages of poems that have never before been exhibited publicly. Many of the poems have lines crossed out and handwritten additions in the margins.

There will be a selection of paintings and works on paper of her best known images including her light-swept, vaporous paintings of Long Island and her diaphanous cityscapes. There will be particular emphasis of works from the 1960s into the 1970s, and an important group of gritty cityscapes from the 1950s. John Ashbery concludes in the exhibition catalogue introduction:

Her pictures always have an air of just coming into being, of tentativeness that is the lifeblood of art. There are always new and surprising full passages where you couldn’t imagine another artist coming to the same decisions, which are invariably the right ones….Her work is rich in meanings that continue to resonate with us even after we have moved on and are thinking of something else. It is one reason why we value art and part of what makes her a great artist.

The artist’s work has been exhibited and collected widely throughout the United States. Her paintings are included in major museum collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Cleveland Museum of Art. Her work has been the subject of numerous gallery and museum exhibitions, and was included in the Whitney Biennial in 1955 (then the Annual), 1972, and most recently in 1995, attesting to the timelessness and continued relevancy of her art and vision. In 2004 a monograph on the artist’s work was published by Abrams with texts by Klaus Kertess and Thomas Nozkowski. In 2005 she won the American Academy of Arts and Letter’s Gold Medal in Painting, its highest honor. She continues to paint in her studio on lower Fifth Avenue. A suite of her prints was recently published.

A hardbound exhibition catalogue will be available with an introduction by John Ashbery; text by scholar Jenni Quilter; selected poems and letters by Ashbery, Koch, O’Hara, Schuyler. The publication will include over sixty color images.