Howardena Pindell is among the contemporary artists included in our April 4 sale of African-American Fine Art. Her work explores texture, color and structures often incorporating punched circles and grids, as well as employing a lengthy, metaphorical process of destruction/reconstruction in the creation process. She was recently interviewed by the New York Times for an article about older African-American artists whose careers have taken off in recent years.
Untitled #1, 1980-81
Pindell first engaged with hole-punched circles by counting and numbering each one, then placing them over a gridded form–often the lines of graph paper–and then adding embellishments such as acrylic, watercolor, glitter and even baby powder, which can be seen in Untitled #1, 1980-81. Her inspiration in numbers and grids grew from her father, a mathematician who often wrote down figures in a gridded journal.
In the work above she collages images of monuments with various postcard images of the Seattle Space Needle and Washington D.C.’s
Untitled, 1970
This untitled work on paper is an excellent and scarce
This significant period is highlighted in the recent traveling retrospective, Howardena Pindell: What Remains to be Seen, on view at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago and curated by Naomi Beckwith and Valerie Cassel Oliver.
Untitled, 1976
Also included in the sale is an untitled color lithograph with chine collé from the A.I.R. Print Portfolio, 1976. A.I.R. Gallery was the first all-female artists cooperative in the United States, founded in 1972 by Pindell and 19 other artists.
In 2013 Swann set the current auction record for Pindell with Untitled #56, 2010, a vibrant green work of punched papers, watercolor, gouache, open bite etching, archival glue and Swiss thread on rag board selling for $43,750.
For more in our April 4 sale, browse the full catalogue, or download the Swann Galleries app.
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