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PEARL BLAUVELT - McDERMOTT & McGOUGH Organized by Bob Nickas May 18 - July 31, 2007 Opening Reception: Friday, May 18, 6-8 pm Images Installation Press Pearl Blauvelt McDermott & McGough |
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A large group of drawings by the self-taught artist Pearl Blauvelt (1893-1987) will be shown alongside works on paper and paintings by the collaborative team McDermott & McGough. The pairing of artists and the selection of works was made by Bob Nickas. ![]() Pearl Blauvelt's drawings, discovered by chance in her former home in Northeast Pennsylvania, date from the 1940s/'50s. It's clear that she drew what she wanted: clothes, furniture, a big house, cars, and money. For all their naiveté, there are some astounding moves: houses are transparent - clothes and the body as well - perspective is reversed, scale highly skewed. She flattens interior walls so that all are visible at the same time, as if seen from above. This is homespun cubism with x-ray vision. Done mostly on ruled notebook paper, these drawings call to mind the image of a child at her school desk, bored by the class and letting her imagination flow. Pearl Blauvelt's style may appear childlike, but there is a crude sophistication to her composition and draftsmanship. Repetition of commercial items alternately gives rise to abstraction and suggests a folky Pop art sensibility. There is text in most of the drawings, and she often identifies every single object - each rug, each pair of stockings, and so on - a clear indication that she was copying images from mail order catalogs. This relates her work to the use appropriation that is common among outsider artists, not only referring to the everyday world in which she lived, but to the one she dreamed would be hers. ![]() |
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