Judith Godwin Exhibition

Berry Campbell

poster for Judith Godwin Exhibition
[Image: Judith Godwin "Black Support" (1960) oil on canvas, 52 x 49 in.]

This event has ended.

Berry Campbell Gallery presents 30 paintings by Abstract Expressionist, Judith Godwin. From 1950, when she first exhibited her work to the present, Godwin has held to her convictions, using a language of abstract form to respond with unbowed directness and passion to life and nature. The steadfast creativity and accomplishment of Godwin and other women of her time have become increasingly acknowledged and given overdue consideration. Among the recent efforts at such restitution was the June-September 2016 groundbreaking exhibition, Women of Abstract Expressionism, held at the Denver Art Museum, curated by University of Denver professor Gwen F. Chanzit.

For Judith Godwin, painting “is an act of freedom and a realization that images generated by the female experience can be a powerful and creative expression for all humanity.”[i] Godwin’s aim throughout her career has been to “emphasize what is important by painting the image of my feelings on canvas-to accept my feelings honestly, and not [to] falsify.”[ii] Through her studies with Hans Hofmann, her long association with Martha Graham and Graham’s expressive dance movements, her participation in the early burgeoning of Abstract Expressionism, and her love for Zen Buddhism and gardening, Godwin has forged a personal and unique career path.

Like many other women artists of her generation, Godwin received less attention in the mid- and late twentieth century from the press and public than her male counterparts. Godwin explained the bias behind this imbalance, recalling that at the time, “the men simply said, ‘Women can’t paint.’”[iii] However, the steadfast creativity and accomplishment of Godwin and other women of her time have become increasingly acknowledged and given overdue consideration. Among the recent efforts at such restitution was the June-September 2016 groundbreaking exhibition, Women of Abstract Expressionism, held at the Denver Art Museum, curated by University of Denver professor Gwen F. Chanzit. In the show, Godwin’s work is featured along with that of Mary Abbott, Jay DeFeo, Perle Fine, Helen Frankenthaler, Sonia Gechtoff, Grace Hartigan, Elaine de Kooning, Lee Krasner, Joan Mitchell, Deborah Remington, and Ethel Schwabacher. Additional venues are the Mint Museum, Charlotte, North Carolina (October 22, 2016-January 22, 2017) and the Palm Springs Art Museum, Palm Springs, California (February 18-May 28, 2017). Godwin’s art has also been represented in recent solo exhibitions at McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas (2008), the Telfair Museum, Savannah, Georgia (2011), and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond (2012).

Born in Suffolk, Virginia, Godwin was encouraged in her aspirations to paint by her parents. Her mother Judith Brewer Godwin was president of the Garden Club of Virginia and active in the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities. Her father, Frank Whitney Godwin, was an amateur architect and gardener. In 1948 Godwin enrolled in Mary Baldwin College in Staunton, Virginia. There, as president of the athletic association, she proposed that the school establish a dance program. At the time Martha Graham was on tour, and Godwin made arrangements for the company to perform at the college. Graham and Godwin felt an immediate affinity-both later recalled that on their initial meeting, they had a long conversation, while sitting on wicker chairs, in which Graham urged Godwin to study dance in New York. Godwin knew that dance was not her calling, but Graham’s recommendation inspired her to come to New York and study painting. When she first arrived, she stayed at the Barbizon Hotel, down the street from Graham. They would become good friends, and Godwin often would attend Graham’s performances and watch from the wings.

Godwin’s first exhibition was held in 1950 at Mountcastle in her hometown. At the time, the influence of Martha Graham’s dance methods already are apparent in the works in her Nucleus series (1950), where abstract, organic shapes press Cubist grid lines outward even while they are being drawn to the center. In 1951, Godwin transferred to the Richmond Professional Institute, now known as Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in Richmond, Virginia, where she received her BFA in 1953. She studied at the Institute with Theresa Pollock and Jewett Campbell, the latter an alumnus of Hans Hofmann’s school and proponent of his teaching methods. On seeing Godwin’s work, Jewett was insistent that she study with Hans Hofmann in New York.

After her graduation from the Institute, Godwin pursued this path. Settling in New York, she enrolled at the Art Students League and began attending Hofmann’s school. The move was daring at the time for a young woman from the South. Godwin remembers that she “didn’t know a soul” in the city.[iv] However, she quickly felt at home. Her teachers at the league were Will Barnet (the first person to take her to lunch in New York), Harry Sternberg, and Vaclav Vytlacil. Godwin soon made other connections with her classmates. Like many others who studied with Hofmann, Godwin derived inspiration and discipline from his instruction. Hofmann held to a belief that painting should undertake issues of depth and volume but retain the flatness inherent to the medium. His ideas about the expressive and spatial qualities of color and his seemingly mystical reverence for the act of painting made a deep impression on Godwin. However, she developed a vocabulary of her own, consisting of open, gestural strokes often featuring chevron, spiraling, and arc forms that she dynamically interwove into complex figure/ground relationships. Examples are Yellow Figure (1953) and Blue Figures (1954), in which she left behind the grid for shapes that move of their own accord, while responding to the surrounding space and each other.

Godwin’s study under Hofmann in New York and Provincetown, Massachusetts, brought her into contact with leading figures in the New York avant garde. Through Hofmann, and while frequenting the famed Cedar Bar, she associated with Jackson Pollock, James Brooks, Mark Rothko, Willem de Kooning, Marcel Duchamp, and Kenzo Okada. Godwin also became drawn to Zen Buddhism in the 1950s. Her friend, Okada, a Japanese abstract painter, introduced her to the meditation-based school, and she was further informed by the writings of the Zen master D. T. Suzuki, who sought to coalesce Buddhist concepts with Western thought. Works such as Abstraction No. 15 (1955) are suggestive of the calm coloration and allusions to the natural world in Okada’s work. Using calligraphic brushwork, Godwin stayed within an abstract framework while evoking the rocks and water that are so prevalent in Japanese art and gardens.

Toward the end of the 1950s Godwin developed a harsher, rougher facture. She recalls that at the time “if you were a [woman] painter … you had to paint as strongly, as violently as the men did.”[v] Works such as Black Pillar (1956) reveal her use of slashing and dragged strokes, with which she abraded the canvas. By the late 1950s, Godwin’s work began to receive attention. She was included in the inaugural exhibition at Betty Parsons’s Section Eleven Gallery in 1957, along with David Budd, Agnes Martin, and Sidney Wolfson. In the following year, she participated in the Stable Gallery Invitational Show, to which she was invited by James Brooks. She was one of few women to exhibit in the Stable Gallery shows. Beginning to use much larger canvases, Godwin worked on sailcloth that she primed and stretched herself in a studio that contained the paraphernalia of a carpentry shop, as she indicated to a reporter for the Richmond (Virginia) News Leader.[vi]

In February 1959, Godwin had a solo exhibition at Betty Parson’s Section Eleven. Of the eleven large abstract works on view, Dore Ashton noted in the New York Times that Godwin had achieved a sense of large spaces and succeeded in “suggesting echoing emptiness.”[vii] In 1960, Godwin had another show at Section Eleven. Ashton wrote of works in the show such as Scorpio (1960) that Godwin had now “strengthened the compositions of her paintings by eliminating half-tones. The large black and blue structures that dominate her paintings seem inspired by those of Franz Kline, but have been altered by soft suggestions of light behind and around them.”[iv] Black Support (1960), also in the exhibition, was singled out by reviewer for Arts Magazine who called it “the most spatially fixed; the major black and white shapes are nearly equal and dominate, as color, the smaller, stained, purple area at the top and the phthalo blue one at the bottom, resulting in a final proportion of color.”[viii]

Media

Schedule

from January 05, 2017 to February 04, 2017

Opening Reception on 2017-01-05 from 18:00 to 20:00

Artist(s)

Judith Godwin

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