Exhibition

Richard Diebenkorn. Works on Paper 1955-1967

8 Nov 2017 – 20 Jan 2018

Regular hours

Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00
Thursday
10:00 – 18:00
Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
10:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00

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Van Doren Waxter is pleased to present an exhibition of works on paper from 1955-1967 by Richard Diebenkorn.

About

Organized in cooperation with the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation, Richard Diebenkorn: Works on paper, 1955-1967, features twenty-seven works, most of which are exhibited here for the first time. 

In 1955, living in Berkeley, CA, Diebenkorn began working figuratively, drawing from the model, painting still lifes, landscapes and interiors, much to the surprise of those who were familiar with his earlier Berkeley series of abstract expressionist paintings leading up to that point. Diebenkorn’s early works from the late 40s through the mid 50s are considered among the finest examples of postwar American abstraction, all the more interesting that he should then change course for a period of about 10 years. Diebenkorn’s Bay Area figurative years from the mid 1950s through the mid 1960s marked a shift from the artist’s early abstractions and set him apart from the prevailing movement of the time and many of his contemporaries, for whom the movement of abstraction was thought to be in direct conflict with figuration.  Diebenkorn’s change in focus embodied his willingness and drive to improvise and reinvent himself and, like the early abstractions that proceeded these works, his contributions to the figurative movement of the time are too considered singular and exceptional.  Of course, Diebenkorn would later return to abstraction, most notably with the iconic Ocean Park series for which the artist is famously associated.

The works selected for this exhibition are intimately scaled. While Diebenkorn’s works are often evocative of his surroundings, these works provide an even deeper familiarity and access into the artist’s way of seeing. Untitled (CR no. 2493), c. 1958, shows the daybed in the living room, the family dog laying on top of the vibrant Indian print fabric which was used decoratively by his wife, Phyllis Diebenkorn, throughout their home. Common domestic scenes become contemplative studies: table settings, a telephone, a view from the window of the artist’s studio. In 1966, Diebenkorn moved from Hillcrest Road in Berkeley, CA to Amalfi Drive in Santa Monica, CA. As with previous moves, each new surrounding would come to provoke a change in the artist’s palette and in the overall rhythm of his compositions. 

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Richard Diebenkorn

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