Showing posts with label Gary Hudson. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gary Hudson. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2016

"Living Color: Gary Hudson in the 1970s"

Gary Hudson, Pi Kuan, 1970
This exhibition, now showing through January 8, 2017, showcases the 1970s work of painter Gary Hudson, who was associated with the lyrical abstraction movement. Hudson received a master’s of fine art degree from Yale University in the 1960s and studied there with famed artist and teacher Hans Hofmann. In the late 1970s, Hudson created works of lyrical abstraction. In contrast to minimalism, the lyrical abstractionists took a looser, more painterly approach to abstract art. Hudson experimented with the importance of color and line in composition. Sometimes he soaked cloth with paint, then pulled it across a canvas, allowing color to saturate the surface randomly. Hudson's works are in public collections including the Whitney Museum of American Art and the San Diego Museum of Fine Arts as well as in many private collections.

Gary Hudson, Silver Plaque, ca. 1971
Sarah Kate Gillespie, curator of the exhibition, said, “This exhibition offers us the opportunity to appreciate and examine a pivotal moment in Hudson’s career. With these works, we can clearly see the legacy of both abstract expressionism and minimalism, but also how the artist took these movements and reshaped them in new ways in the 1970s.”

Related events include:

• Family Day: Express Yourself
September 17, 10 a.m. to noon

• Teen Studio: Abstract Expressionism
November 3, 5:30–8:30 p.m. (free but registration required via 706-542-8863 or email callan@uga.edu)

• Tour at Two
November 16 at 2 p.m.

All events are free and open to the public unless otherwise indicated.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

"New Works by Gary Hudson" at the Madison-Morgan Cultural Center


Lyrical abstractionism. Color field paintings. Abstract Expressionism. These artistic movements may not have much significance to the average person, yet from the 1950s forward, this method of art making was very influential to Gary Hudson, an artist born in New York who eventually settled in Madison, Georgia, after many years of working and traveling. He was a vibrant individual with a knowledge of art history that he applied to large-scale canvases with radiant color blocks. Hudson wrote, “I decided definitely that I was going to be a painter when I saw my first Jackson Pollock.”

Before his death in 2009, Hudson corresponded with Georgia Museum of Art Director William Eiland about his artwork in relation to his life experiences. From a peacetime accident in 1956 that resulted in paralyzation and honorable discharge from the U.S. Marines, to being in social environments with people like Andy Warhol and T.S. Eliot in 1960s New York, Hudson lived life to the fullest. His breakthrough came in 1969 when his painting Red Rim showed at the Whitney Museum’s Biennial. His style emerged from his desire to show the artist’s hand in the work. He used non-traditional devices to apply the paint, from spatulas to muslin on a stick soaked in paint. One can see in his art the allusions to the upbeat tempo of jazz and avant-garde artists in New York with the shifting lights and darks as well as the relationship between the organic and linear marks.

Hudson and his family, including wife Christie, moved to Jefferson, Georgia, in 1988 to find rest and healing. His interest in historic preservation and small-town America blossomed, and eventually they moved to Madison. In the last years of his life, he enjoyed watching SEC with friends or daydreaming on his front porch with his Jack Russell Terrier Roz. He did not paint as much during this time, but when he did, he created dialogues where “mysterious questions can be posed.” Hudson profoundly wrote,

“Painting… is a reference back to those little tiny fleeting moments in our short lives when we see something at a glance, a ray of light, a color of a flower in its particularity, not its whole, moments in time which register on our eyes to our brain and give a start. The painter in me wants to recall ... those tiny flashes of recognition.” (http://bit.ly/axSkZI)

Please plan a visit to the Madison-Morgan Cultural Center in Madison, just 30 minutes south of Athens, to see “New Works by Gary Hudson,” on view through July 9, 2010. While in Madison, take a stroll along the shaded sidewalks to experience the town like Hudson did. For more information, visit http://bit.ly/aVwsZg.