Victoria Barr (painter)

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Victoria Barr (born 1937) is an American artist, painter, and set designer.

Life[]

Victoria Barr was born in New York, NY, in 1937 to the curator and art historian Alfred H. Barr, Jr. and art historian Margaret Scolari Barr.[1] As a child, she spent summers in Greensboro, Vermont, with her parents, as well as attended a number of residential camps focusing on the arts.[1] Barr often traveled to Europe with her parents from the age of 14 onwards, meeting influential artists like Pablo Picasso, Henri Matisse, and Marc Chagall and collectors like Peggy Guggenheim.[1] For high school, she went to Milton Academy in Milton, Massachusetts. After high school, she briefly attended Radcliffe College (1955–1956).[1] Then she studied at the Parsons School of Design, focused on graphics and advertising.[2] There she took classes in art history from Leo Steinberg and in color theory from , who was Josef Albers' studio assistant at Yale.[1] Afterward meeting Sillman, Barr decided to attend the Yale Art School, graduating in 1961.[1] She started at Yale working to be a commercial artist in graphics then started taking painting classes from Neil Welliver, then with Albers, another one of his assistants Cy Twombly, as well as Bernard Chaet and William Bailey. She lived and worked in Aspen for some time in the early 1960s.[1] Back in New York, she worked for a time as a secretary to the art dealer . Then in 1964, she traveled to Paris, France on a Fulbright scholarship, along with fellow artist and Fulbright scholars Nancy Graces, who would later marry Richard Serra who joined their group in Paris, and Philip Glass.[1] After two years in Paris, she returned to the US in 1966 and got a job at the Museum of Natural History in the exhibition's department for a year. Barr later taught courses at Hunter College and at Barnard.[1] She still lives in New York, NY.[3]

Artwork[]

Barr is most well known for her abstract landscapes, which come out of a tradition of post-war American Abstract Expressionism, Lyrical Abstraction, and Color Field painting. Her early works she described as "filmstrip-type" paintings and later "stained paintings."[1] She also connected her work to an interest in landscape to Chinese landscape painting in terms of different layers of gradation.[1] Her work often deals with her interest in understanding the world, outside of the European Christianity. Her extensive travels throughout Europe, South and East Asia, and the Pacific were part of this research project.

In 1970, Barr's work was shown at the with work in acrylic and watercolor and a series of "stained paintings" at Larry Aldrich.[4][1] In 1981, she had a show at the gallery in New York.[5] She has works in a number of important collections, including Surfacing (1971) in the Whitney Museum collection[6] and the University of North Dakota's collection.[7]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l "Oral history interview with Victoria Barr, 1977 January 11-February 18". www.aaa.si.edu. Retrieved 2020-05-22.
  2. ^ Barr, Victoria (2019-09-20). "Kuta Beach, Bali 1977 (Set of 61)". Artist and Gallery Ephemera.
  3. ^ Glueck, Grace (1981-08-16). "Alfred Hamilton Barr Jr. Is Dead; Developer of Modern Art Museum". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-05-22.
  4. ^ "Kasha Linville on Victoria Barr". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2020-05-22.
  5. ^ Yau, J (August 1981). "Victoria Barr at Haber Theodore {New York; exhibit}". Art in America. 69: 147–148 – via Art & Architecture Resource.
  6. ^ "Victoria Barr | Surfacing". whitney.org. Retrieved 2020-05-22.
  7. ^ Barr, Victoria (2019-09-20). "Kuta Beach, Bali 1977 (Set of 61)". Artist and Gallery Ephemera.
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