- Gwendolyn Holbrow
Gwendolyn Holbrow (born
August 22 ,1957 ), is an American artist. Primarily asculptor , she works in a variety of media and addresses an eclectic array of topics, with exploration of boundaries a recurring theme: between the tangible and intangible worlds; between the genders; between the individual and society. Humor and satire abound in Holbrow’s art.Notable Exhibitions, Installations and Awards
Holbrow’s career highlights demonstrate both the restlessness of her vision and her skill at executing her conceptions. She has won a Gold Medal at the
Massachusetts Horticultural Society ’s prestigious Annual Flower Show, with "The Root-Children", which addressed that year’s show theme, “Deeply Rooted.” She won Best of Show at the Cambridge, MA Art Association’s National Prize Show with Queen Kong, a seven-foot tallBarbie contemplating a – by far the highest value fetched by any of that project’s many well-received pieces.Other memorable pieces and exhibitions have included "Keep it Clean", a table fountain featuring a nude Ken and Barbie together in a (working) miniature shower; "It Was Here", a bronze and concrete “historical marker” that lures the observer into noting the infinite, overlooked value of the present moment; and "River of Grass", a living sculpture at the Chesterwood Estate and Museum in Stockbridge, MA, in which Holbrow transforms a line of tall grass and wildflowers into a stream, waterfall and pool coursing through the estate’s carefully-manicured grounds.
Early Life and Education
Holbrow was born in New York City. Her physicist father’s professional pursuits kept the family constantly on the move during her childhood, and she attended a large number of schools, public and private, before graduating from the
George School in Newtown, PA, in 1975. She enrolled in theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison and earned a bachelor’s degree in linguistics in 1980; she studied medicine for a year but found medical studies unfulfilling and left to begin a family.Artistic Training, Development and Philosophy
Holbrow first studied commercial art in the mid-1980s, at the
Madison Area Technical College inMadison, WI , but it would be some time before her creative focus turned strongly to art. In 1989, she and her husband moved their family toFrankfurt ,Germany , and while there, Holbrow did professional graphic-arts work, received classical voice training, and involved herself in the local choral and opera community. During a visit to theVan Gogh Museum inAmsterdam in 1998, Holbrow realized Von Gogh's student art was as primitive and problematic, as the paintings on which she was then laboring; perhaps hers held some promise as well. Her serious study of fine art began at this point. Returning to America in 1998, Holbrow earned her Bachelor of Arts degree in Studio Art in 2001 fromFramingham State College in Massachusetts, and soon after started teaching art herself at the Danforth Museum with only the use of her feet. Full body function was regained later.Holbrow’s training reflects her quirky willingness to tackle a vast variety of media, subjects and issues: she lists auto-body training along with more conventional pursuits such as
stone carving on her vitae.Holbrow says her overarching motivation as an artist is “making people pay attention”: experientially as with "It Was Here", or to social/political issues as with her extensive forays into Barbie art, which have won her frequent acclaim. Holbrow’s take on the way Barbie, personifying women in America, is idealized in order to be vilified: “Barbie is our shadow and you have to embrace your shadow.” In her artist’s statement accompanying "Speech Balloons", a body of work that seeks to manifest
communication in tangible form, Holbrow wrote: “My task as an artist is to serve as channel between the seen and unseen worlds, facilitating the flow, and creating or revealing connections which nourish the inner lives of individuals and the community.”elected Awards and Achievements
*"Make Way For Calflings" raises $50,000 at auction for the Jimmy Fund, Boston, 2006
*Artist's Valentine Grant Competition winner for Speech Balloon body of work, Ann Wilson Lloyd, juror, Groton, MA, 2006
*Best of Show for sculpture Queen Kong, Cambridge Art Association National Prize Show, Robert Fitzpatrick, Pritzker Director of the Museum of Contemporary Art - Chicago, juror; Cambridge, MA, 2004
*Gold Medal for special exhibit The Root-Children (Die Wurdelkinder), New England Flower Show, Boston, MA, 2004
*Artist's Valentine Grant Competition winner for Barbie body of work, Nick Capasso, juror, Groton, MA, 2003
*Listed in Who's Who of American Women, 2002-7 editions; Who's Who in America, 2006-2007
*Silver Medal for special exhibit The Queen's Croquet-Grounds, New England Flower Show, Boston, MA, 2002
*Juror's Choice Award for acoustic sculpture Gravity Chimes, Cambridge Art Association SOUND juried show, 2001
*Cheryl di Mento Memorial Art History Essay Award for Louise Bourgeois, Framingham State College, 2001
*Distinguished Artist, Concord Art Association, 2001
*First prize for tabletop fountain Keep It Clean, Concord Art Association Members' Juried Show II, 2000Articles and Reviews
*"Contemporary Sculptors at Chesterwood 2006," by Marty Carlock, Sculpture, April, 2007
*"Artists 3," by Chris Bergeron, Metrowest Daily News, October 8, 2006
*"Exhibitionist," by Geoff Edgers, Boston.com, September 25, 2006
*"Cows Auctioned to boost the Jimmy Fund," Boston Globe, September 22, 2006
*"Screwing with Barbie," by Brita Belli, Fairfield County Weekly, July 13, 2006
*"Barbie as Art," by Candace Taylor, Play, July 12, 2006
*"Plastic Princess," by Donna Doherty, New Haven Register, July 15, 2006
*"Barbie's Bubble Burst?" by Adrienne LaFrance, WBUR.org Visual Arts, January 23, 2006
*"Role Model," by Greg Cook, Boston Phoenix, December 16, 2005
*"Plastic Princess' Barbie has issues in this Exhibit," by Joel Brown, Boston Globe, December 11, 2005
*"Raising The Barbie," by Brigit Alverson, North Shore Sunday, December 4, 2005
*"This Barbie's not for kids," by Rebecca Schoonmaker, Salem News, November 4, 2005
*"Go! Ahead," by June Wulff, Boston Globe, October 17, 2004
*"Anything goes in CAA prize exhibition," by Cate McQuaid, Boston Globe, May 28, 2004
*"After top flower show honors..." by Cate Coulacos Prato, Boston Globe, April 4, 2004
*"Barbie artist wins grant," NESA News, Fall, 2002
*"Gwendolyn Holbrow" by Maxine Farkas, Middlesex Beat, November 2002
*"A few provocative 'works' highlight show" by Susan Leveene, Daily free Press, November 14, 2002
*"The pulse of ART" by Chris Bergeron, Metrowest Daily News, October 17, 2002
*"Students Shine at Art Exhibit" by Kate Vlachtchenko, The Gatepost, November 17, 2000External links
* [http://www.gwendolynholbrow.com Artist's official website]
* [http://www.danforthmuseum.org/ Danforth Museum] , where Holbrow has studied, taught and exhibited
* [http://www.nesculptors.com/ New England Sculptors Association] , on whose Board of Directors Holbrow serves
* [http://www.saatchi-gallery.co.uk/yourgallery/artist_profile/Gwendolyn+Holbrow/19411.html/ Saatchi Gallery Online] , Holbrow profile
* [http://www.sculpture.org/ International Sculpture Center]
* [http://www.cambridgeart.org/ Cambridge Art Association] , Cambridge, MA
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