Susan Rothenberg
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Susan Rothenberg is a contemporary painter who lives and works in New Mexico, USA.
Rothenberg was born in Buffalo, New York, in 1945. After graduating from Cornell University, she had her first solo exhibition of three large horse paintings at 112 Greene Street Gallery in 1975. Beginning in the mid-1970s, Rothenberg has been widely recognized as one of the most innovative and independent artists of our time. From her early days in SoHo through her move to New Mexico's desert landscape, Rothenberg has remained as influenced and challenged by her physical surroundings and artistic issues as by her personal experiences. In addition to her earliest horse paintings, Rothenberg has utilized numerous forms as subject matter, such as heads and bodies, dancing figures, animals, and atmospheric landscapes. Rothenberg's visceral canvases continue to evolve as she explores the boundary between figural representation and abstraction, the role of color and light, and the translation of her personal experience to a painterly surface.
Rothenberg’s first solo exhibition in New York in 1975, consisting of three large-scale painting of horses, was heralded for introducing imagery into minimalist abstraction and bringing a new sensitivity to figuration. Peter Schjeldahl called the show “a eureka,” stating that “the large format of the pictures was a gesture of ambition” and that “the mere reference to something really existing was astonishing.”
If Rothenberg is known first and foremost as a painter—her visceral works exploring the boundary between figural representation and abstraction, the role of color and light, and the translation of her personal experience to a painterly surface—she has also made crucial contributions to the medium of drawing. On the occasion of her 2004 exhibition of drawings at Sperone Westwater, Robert Storr wrote, “...fundamentally, drawing is as much a matter of evocation as it is of depiction, of identifying the primary qualities of things in the world and transposing them without a loss of quiddity. This at any rate is what drawing has been for Rothenberg.”
Rothenberg has had numerous solo exhibitions throughout the United States and abroad. Her first major survey, initiated by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, traveled to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Carnegie Institute, and Tate Gallery, London, among other institutions (1983–1985). Recent exhibitions include a retrospective organized by Albright-Knox Art Gallery in Buffalo (1992–1994) that traveled to Washington, D.C., St. Louis, Chicago, and Seattle (1992); a retrospective at the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo in Monterrey, Mexico (1996); a survey of prints and drawings presented by the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University (1998); and Susan Rothenberg: Paintings from the Nineties at The Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (1999). Rothenberg has been the recipient of the National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship Grant (1979), the Cornell University Alumni Award (1998), the Skowhegan Medal for Painting (1998), and Sweden's Rolf Schock Prize (2003).
In 1991, Harry N. Abrams, Inc., published a major monograph on Rothenberg written by Joan Simon (Simon, Joan, Susan Rothenberg, New York: Harry N. Abrams, Inc., 1991).
Susan Rothenberg is represented by Sperone Westwater, New York.[1]
1978 "Susan Rothenberg, Recent Work," Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota, 20 May – 2 July (catalogue)
1981-1982 “Susan Rothenberg,” Kunsthalle Basel, Switzerland, 3 October – 15 November; Frankfurter Kunstverein, Frankfurt, 7 December – 31 January; Louisiana Museum, Humlebaek, Denmark, 13 March – 2 May (catalogue) “Susan Rothenberg,” Akron Art Museum, Ohio, 21 November – 10 January
1982 “Susan Rothenberg: Recent Paintings,” Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, 14 October – 29 November (catalogue)
1983-1985 “Susan Rothenberg,” Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California, September 1 – October 16; San Francisco Museum of Art, California, 10 November – 25 December; Museum of Art, Carnegie Institute, Pittsburgh, 18 January – 18 March 1984; Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, 10 April – 3 June; Aspen Center for the Visual Arts, Colorado, 1 July – 19 August; Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan, 9 September – 21 October; Tate Gallery, London, 21 November – 20 January 1985; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, 26 February – 27 March (catalogue)
“Currents,” ICA, Boston, April.
1985 “Centric 13: Susan Rothenberg—Works on Paper,” University Art Museum, California State Center, Long Beach, 12 March – 21 April; Des Moines Art Center, Iowa, 21 June – 28 July (catalogue)
“Susan Rothenberg, Prints,” Des Moines Art Center, Iowa, September – October
1988 “Drawing Now: Susan Rothenberg,” Baltimore Museum of Art, Maryland, 23 February – 4 April
1990 “Susan Rothenberg,” Rooseum Center for Contemporary Art, Malmo, Sweden, 30 June – 17 August 1990 (catalogue)
1992–94 "Susan Rothenberg, Paintings and Drawings, 1974–1992," Albright Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, 14 November, 1992–3 January 1993; Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C., 10 February–9 May 1993: The Saint Louis Art Museum, Saint Louis, MO., 27 May–25 July 1993; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, 20 August–24 October 1993; Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA., 17 November–9 January, 1994; The Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX, 30 January–27 March 1994 (catalogue)
1995 "Focus Series," Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, VA, 18 February–2 July
1996-97 "Susan Rothenberg," MARCO, Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Monterrey, Monterrey, Mexico, 4 October 1996–19 January 1997 (catalogue) 1998–99 "Susan Rothenberg: Drawings and Prints," Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, 22 August–25 October; The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, HI, 15 January–14 March; Museum of Fine Arts, Santa Fe, NM, 21 March–24 May (catalogue)
1999- 2000 "Susan Rothenberg: Paintings from the 90's," Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MFA, 18 November 1999 – 17 January 2000 (Catalogue)
