FIGUREWORKS

168 N. 6th Street ¥ Brooklyn, NY 11211 ¥ 718-486-7021 ¥  www.figureworks.com

 

PRESS RELEASE

 

GALLERY         Figureworks

                      Fine art of the human form

LOCATION       168 North 6th St.

                      (1 block from Bedford Avenue ÒLÓ train, between Bedford Ave./ Driggs Ave.)

                      Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY 11211

 

EXHIBIT           Bob Stanley (1932-1997)

                      1960Õs Erotic Series

 

DATES             June 6 – July 27, 2008

                      Reception: Friday, June 13, 2008   6-9PM 

      

HOURS            Friday, Saturday, Sunday

          1-6 PM or by appointment
         

Figureworks is pleased to present the erotic work of pop-artist Bob Stanley from a series he executed in the late 1960's. This exhibition includes Bianchini Gallery's complete 1966 silkscreen portfolio. Original ink drawings for this series are also generously included through the Stanley estate http://estateofbobstanley.org/

 

Mr. Stanley defined his work from this period by limiting each piece to two punched-up colors, such as purple and red or orange and green. Solid blocks of color expose each figure while the opposing color supports details or the grounds in which they are placed. By cleverly using this technique to abstract his subjects, the sexually explicit nature of the work is much more inviting than confrontational.

 

Bold in color and graphic in nature, this work clearly defines the sexual liberation of the 1960Õs.  

 

Published in the New York Times shortly after his death on November 21, 1997, Roberta Smith commemorated the life of this artist:

 

Mr. Stanley was born in Yonkers, N.Y., in 1932. After attending Columbia University for two years, he received a bachelor's degree in English literature in 1953 from Oglethorpe College in Atlanta and studied art at the High Museum of Art there. Back in New York, he first worked in collage. In the early 1960's, he began to base his paintings on images clipped from newspapers and magazines, following the example of Pop artists like Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein, who would become his brother-in-law.

 

Enlarged and often rendered in two equally saturated colors (red and green, for example), Mr. Stanley's images could border on the abstract or be powerfully explicit. His preferred subjects, including rock stars, sporting events and pornography, always seemed to grate against the pretenses of high art. In the late 1960's Mr. Stanley started using his own photographs, basing paintings on images of tree branches or the ground, and also using pictures of life-drawing models at the School of Visual Arts, where he was a faculty member for 16 years.

 

Mr. Stanley had his first solo show at Paul Bianchini in 1965 and thereafter exhibited regularly in New York City and Europe. His most recent exhibition, held last month at the Mitchell Algus Gallery in Manhattan, completed its run the day he died. His work is represented in many public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art in Manhattan; the Fort Worth Museum of Modern Art, the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington and the Milwaukee Art Museum.

 

Figureworks is located at 168 N. 6th St., Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY 11211, one block from the Bedford Avenue ÒLÓ train. The gallery is open to the public Friday, Saturday, Sunday from 1-6 PM and is dedicated to exhibiting contemporary and 20th century fine art of the human form.

 

For more information please call 718-486-7021 or visit us online at http://www.figureworks.com

 

CONTACT:       Director: Randall Harris

                        Figureworks

                        168 North 6th St.

                        Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY 11211

                        718-486-7021

                        harris@figureworks.com