Roberta Allen

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Roberta Allen
Born1945
New York, NY
Occupation
  • Conceptual artist
  • Fiction writer
NationalityUnited States
Period1960s–present
Website
www.robertaallen.com

Roberta Allen is a conceptual artist and fiction writer. Her interest in language is the bridge that connects these separate pursuits. As a conceptual artist who combines image and text, she explores how language changes or informs our perception of images. Her works have included drawings, artist books, photo/text works, installations, digital prints and sculpture. Her works in the early 1970s were inspired by Kierkegaard’s belief that our deepest experiences occur in the form of contradictions and wherever there is contradiction humor is present. Through the 1970s, she exhibited alongside Sol LeWitt, Robert Ryman and Carl Andre, among others, at John Weber Gallery in New York. In her writing, which includes, among other books, three micro and short story collections, a novel, a novella and a travel memoir, Allen questions the way we perceive the world and the self. Truths are relative and may change in a flash. The way our minds work and specifically the act of relating is her main subject. She presents disturbing views of the human scene which are often relieved by humor.

Early life[]

Roberta Allen is a New York-based artist who was born and raised in New York, NY. At age twenty, she traveled alone to Europe and lived briefly in Athens, Amsterdam and Berlin, later in Mexico. Over the years, she traveled, often alone, to the Peruvian Amazon, Indonesia, Turkey, Egypt, Mali and countries in Central America. Her travels inspired many of her stories.

Art career[]

Allen began as a painter living in Amsterdam where she had her first one-person gallery exhibition in 1967. After several one-person shows in New York, she joined in 1973 and had one-person exhibitions there in 1974, 75, 77, 79.[1] During this time, she also had one-person gallery exhibitions in Milan, Dusseldorf, Brussels, Munich and Rome. She had one-person museum exhibitions at MoMA P.S. 1, L.I.C., NY, 1977, 80; the Kunstforum, Städtische Galerie in Lenbachhaus, Munich, 1981,[2] and , Perth, Western Australia, 1989. Her conceptual works, which combine image and text, include drawings, collages, artist books,[3] photo/text series and installations. She has been in over one hundred group exhibitions worldwide. After 1981, while continuing to make conceptual art and exhibiting intermittently, she preferred to stay outside the art world. In 2014, the Athenaeum Music & Arts Library in La Jolla, CA began a catalogue raisonne of her multiple edition 1970s artist books and a one-person exhibition of her 1970s art took place at Minus Space[4] in Dumbo, Brooklyn. A one-person show of recent conceptual drawings and one-of-a-kind artist books took place at the Athenaeum in 2016. A one person exhibition, "Some Facts About Fear" took place in 2017 in Minus Space in Brooklyn.

[5]

Writing career[]

Allen began writing fiction in 1979 while making conceptual art. Her first stories were published in 1980 by Sun & Moon Press[6] in the anthology Contemporary American Fiction (along with John Ashbery and Walter Abish, among others). Her first story collection was The Traveling Woman, (Vehicle Editions).[7] Her other books are The Daughter, (Autonomedia),[8] Certain People, (Coffee House Press);[9] Amazon Dream (City Lights)[10] Fast Fiction, (Story Press),[11] The Playful Way to Serious Writing,[12] The Playful to Knowing Yourself,[13] (both Houghton Mifflin) and The Dreaming Girl (, new edition Ellipsis Press).[14] Her latest story collection is The Princess of Herself, published by Pelekinesis Press in 2017[12] . Her short shorts and short stories have appeared in over 300 literary magazines, including Conjunctions, Guernica, Bomb, The Brooklyn Rail, Open City, The Collagist, Gargoyle and in many anthologies, including , published by W.W. Norton in 2017. She received the 2015 Honorable Mention for for Fiction. She has been a in Fiction at the University of the South and a Yaddo Fellow.

Selected one person exhibitions[]

  • 2017 Minus Space, Brooklyn, NY
  • 2016 Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, La Jolla, CA.
  • 2014 Minus Space, Brooklyn, NY
  • 1989 Perth Institute of Contemporary Arts, Perth, Western Australia
  • 1981 Galerie Walter Storms, Munich, Germany
  • 1981 Kunstforum, Stadt. Galerie im Lembachhaus, Munich, Germany
  • 1981 Galleria Primo Piano, Rome, Italy
  • 1980 P.S. 1 Museum, Long Island City, NY
  • 1979 John Weber Gallery, NYC
  • 1978 Hal Bromm Gallery, NYC
  • 1978 MTL Galerie, Brussels, Belgium
  • 1978 Fine Arts Center, C.W. Post College, Glenvale, LI., NY
  • 1977 Galerie Maier-Hahn, Dusseldorf, Germany
  • 1977 John Weber Gallery, NYC
  • 1977 Franklin Furnace, NYC
  • 1977 P.S. 1 Museum, Long Island City, NY
  • 1975 John Weber Gallery, NYC
  • 1974 John Weber Gallery, NYC
  • 1974 Galleria Toselli, Milan, Italy
  • 1967 Galerie 845, Amsterdam, Netherlands

Grants and fellowships[]

  • 2017-18 Long-listed for the Gordon Burn Prize for The Princess of Herself
  • 2017 Tree of Life Artist Grant
  • 2010 Virginia Center For The Creative Arts, Residency Fellowship, Amherst, VA
  • 2005 Virginia Center For The Creative Arts, Residency Fellowship, Amherst, VA
  • 1998 Tennessee Williams Fellow In Creative Writing/Writer In Residence, University of the South, Sewanee, TN
  • 1994 Virginia Center For The Creative Arts, Residency Fellowship, Amherst, VA
  • 1993 Yaddo Residency Fellowship, Saratoga Springs, New York
  • 1989 Artist-In-Residence Fellowship, Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia
  • 1987 Yaddo Residency Fellowship, Saratoga Springs, New York
  • 1986 Virginia Center For The Creative Arts, Residency Fellowship, Amherst, VA
  • 1985 VCCA Residency Feliowship
  • 1985 LINE (NEA & NYS Council) Grant
  • 1983 Yaddo Residency Fellowship
  • 1978-79 CAPS (Creative Artists Public Service) Grant (Sculpture)
  • 1972 Ossabaw Island Project Residency Fellowship
  • 1971-72 MacDowell Colony Residency Fellowship

Multiple edition artist books[]

  • Some Facts About Fear, published by the artist, Rome, 1981, limited edition
  • Everything in the world there is to know is known by somebody, but not by the same knower, Ottenhausen Verlag, Munich, 1981, edition of 300
  • Possibilities, John Weber Gallery & Parasol Press, 1977, edition of 1000
  • Pointless Acts, Collation Center, NY 1977, edition of 1000
  • Pointless Arrows, published by the artist, 197G, edition of 1000
  • Partially Trapped Lines, Parasol Press, SA, 1975, limited edition of 200
  • The Invisible Line of Limitation, Parasol Press, SA, 1975, limited edition of 200

Selected bibliography[]

  • Silverblatt, Michael, "Roberta Allen: The Princess of Herself," Bookworm, KCRW Los Angeles, CA, March 22, 2018, live and online.
  • Torri, Erika, Roberta Allen, Artists' Books Collection, Athenaeum Music & Arts Library, La Jolla, CA., May 2017, 64 pages.
  • Zinnser, John, "Writing Anti-Stories: An Interview with Roberta Allen," Bomb Magazine, (Online), Oct. 11, 2017
  • Seed, John, Clusters of Loose Geometries in Conceptual "Thought Drawings," Roberta Allen (Review), Hyperallergic, Nov. 10, 2016 online.
  • Catalog of exhibition, Un Museo Ideale: The Collection of Bianca & Mario Bertolini, Museo del Novecento, Milan, Italy, 2015.
  • Goodrich, Melissa, (Online Interview) "The Hair Stylist Who Fell Twenty Feet And Landed Upright: An Interview with Roberta Allen," The Collagist Blog, Dzanc Books, Jan. 22, 2014
  • Vartanian, Hrag, Best of 2014: Our Top 10 Brooklyn Art Shows: #2 Roberta Allen: Works from the 1970s at Minus Space, Hyperallergic, Dec. 23, 2014, online.
  • McConnell, Suzanne, “The Dreaming Girl,” Web Exclusive, The Brooklyn Rail, Feb. 2012
  • Wynn Kramarshy / Amy Eshoo, Editor, 560 BROADWAy: A New York Drawing Collection at Work, 1991-2006, Fifth Floor Foundation with Yale University Press, 2008, pp 161, 177.
  • Winters, Laura, “Certain People & Other Stories.” The New York Times Book Review, March 23, 1997, 18.
  • Indiana, Gary, “Have Pain Will Travel.” The Village Voice, Books, December 23, 1986, 72.
  • “Metaphor in Midocean.” “Noted With Pleasure,” (Excerpt) The New York Times Book Review, June 22, 1986, 39.
  • Shaw, Janet, “Quicksilver Nightmares.” The New York Times Book Review, June 8, 1986, 36.
  • Erweiteerte Fotografie/Extended Photography, catalog of exhibition at Wiener Seccession, Vienna, Austria, 1981
  • Rein, Ingrid, Paradoxa mit Pfeil und Fisch, Die Installationen von Roberta Allen, Suddeutsche Zeitung, April 27, 1981
  • Skira Annuel, Art Actuel, 1979, Geneva, Statement by the artist, p 32
  • O'Grady, Holly, The Paradoxical Arrow: Roberta Allen's Installations And Books, (article), Arts Magazine, February 1979, pp 156,157
  • Lopes Cardozo, Judith, Roberta Allen (review) Artforum, February 1978, pp 73, 74
  • Lubell, Ellen, Roberta Allen (review) Arts Magazine, October 1977, pp 23,24
  • Deitch, Jeffrey, Roberta Allen, (article), Arts Magazine, June 1977, p 6
  • Auping, Michael, New Work/New York catalog of exhibition at California State University, Los Angeles, 1976.
  • Lubell, Ellen, Alighiero E. Boetti/Roberta Allen (review), Arts Magazine, April 1975, pp 19, 20
  • Gilbert-Rolfe, Jeremy, Roberta Allen (review), Artforum, May 1974, p 69

Selected public collections[]

  • Museum of Modern Art, NYC
  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art, NYC
  • The Cooper-Hewitt Museum, NYC
  • Bibliotheque du France, Paris, France
  • Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, Ohio
  • Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, MA
  • Stadtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus, Munich, Germany
  • Art Gallery of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia
  • Wadsworth Athenaeum, Hartford, CT.
  • Athenaeum, Music & Arts Library, La Jolla, CA
  • Museo del Novecento, Milan, Italy


Teaching (writing)[]

Teaching positions include: The Writing Program, New School University from 1992 – 2010, Columbia University's School of the Arts, University of the South, Sewanee, TN, Parsons School of Design, NY, Summer Writers' Conference, Hofstra University, International Women's Writing Guild Conference, Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY. Allen's private writing workshops began in 1991 and continue to the present.

References[]

  1. ^ Jules Heller, Nancy G. Heller (eds), "Roberta Allen", North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary (Garland Publishing, Incorporated, 1997)
  2. ^ [1], a Städtische Galerie im Lenbachhaus München
  3. ^ [2], Parasol Press Ltd. 1977
  4. ^ [3] Minus Space
  5. ^ John Seed (November 11, 2016). "Clusters of Loose Geometries in Conceptual "Thought Drawings"". hyperallergic.
  6. ^ Sun & Moon Press Archive [pdf.oac.cdlib.org/pdf/ucsd/spcoll/mss0224.pdf], Folder 14 Allen, Roberta Box 2
  7. ^ [4] Traveling Women (Vehicle Editions; First edition, March 1986)
  8. ^ [5] The Daughter (Autonomedia, 6/1/1992)
  9. ^ [6] Certain People (Coffee House Press, February 1997)
  10. ^ [7] Amazon Dream City Lights Publishers (October 1992)
  11. ^ [8] Fast Fiction: Creating Fiction in Five Minutes Story Pr; 1st edition (June 1997)
  12. ^ [9] The Playful Way to Serious Writing Mariner Books; 1 edition (September 9, 2002)
  13. ^ [10] The Playful Way to Knowing Yourself: A Creative Workbook to Inspire Self-Discovery Mariner Books (April 29, 2003)
  14. ^ [11] The Dreaming Girl Ellipsis Press, 2011
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