"Audrey Flack: Master Drawings from Crivelli to Pollock" at Hollis Taggart Galleries will present a new body of work from legendary painter Audrey Flack, signaling her triumphant return to two dimensions after nearly three decades working almost exclusively in sculpture. These new works draw on Flack’s longstanding interest in Baroque and Old Masters, and places these sources alongside imagery gleaned from the 20th century canon, including Abstract Expressionism and Pop art. Across the thirty works in this exhibition, Flack experiments with drawing, painting, and printmaking, infusing each piece with her vibrant contemporary vision.
Flack’s marriage of Modern and Baroque makes explicit a concern that has occupied the artist throughout her career, namely an interest in contemporary art that spans centuries and art historical movements. She reminds us that the Baroque masters were groundbreaking contemporary artists in their own time, just as the Abstract Expressionists were in theirs. The centerpiece of this exhibition, a large painting entitled "Fiat Lux," combines figures from Peter Paul Rubens’ "Garden of Love" (1630s) with classic comic book superheroes. Flack uses as her source not the Rubens painting, but its woodcut, thereby drawing visual parallels between heavy outlining and graphic style of both classical printmaking and modern comic book illustrations.
A dominant theme in this group of works is the depiction of figures, and especially of women, who have been maligned by history. Flack turns to film star Marilyn Monroe, sculptor and assistant to Rodin Camille Claudel, and the misunderstood St. Theresa in Ecstasy, presenting each as an icon in their own right. Flack absorbs the figures’ complicated histories, embellishing their portraits with collage elements and text that transform their hardships into celebrations of strength.
Audrey Flack has been a fixture in the New York art world since her student days at the Cooper Union in the late 1940s and early 1950s. Her early Abstract Expressionist paintings reflect time spent at the Club and the Cedar Bar. She later became a pioneering Photorealist, before moving into figural sculpture, often on a large scale. Flack has recently been experimenting in printmaking and mixed media. Throughout her career, her voracious spirit has manifested in works that probe mythic stories and heroic figures with intimate and personal sensibilities.