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Anne Truitt

Anne Truitt (March 16, 1921 – December 23, 2004),[1] born Anne Dean, was an American sculptor of the mid-20th century.

Anne Truitt
A Wall for Apricots, 1968
Born
Anne Dean

(1921-03-16)March 16, 1921
DiedDecember 23, 2004(2004-12-23) (aged 83)
NationalityAmerican
Known forSculpture, Color Field
MovementMinimalism

She became well known in the late 1960s for her large-scale minimalist sculptures, especially after influential solo shows at André Emmerich Gallery in 1963 and the Jewish Museum (Manhattan) in 1966. Unlike her contemporaries, she made her own sculptures by hand, eschewing industrial processes. Drawing from imagery from her past, her work also deals with the visual trace of memory and nostalgia.[2] This is exemplified by a series of early sculptures resembling monumental segments of white picket fence.[3]

Early life and education edit

Truitt grew up in Easton, on Maryland's Eastern Shore, and spent her teenage years in Asheville, North Carolina.[4] She graduated from Bryn Mawr College with a degree in psychology in 1943. She declined an offer to pursue a Ph.D. in Yale University’s psychology department and worked briefly as a nurse[5] in a psychiatric ward at Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston.[6] She left the field of psychology in the mid-1940s, first writing fiction and then enrolling in courses offered by the Institute of Contemporary Art in Washington, D.C.[4] She married the journalist James Truitt in 1947, though they divorced in 1971. It was said that James used to tease about Anne's columnar sculptures in referring to the works as "telephone booths".[7]

Work edit

After leaving the field of clinical psychology in the mid-1940s, Truitt began making figurative sculptures, but turned toward reduced geometric forms after visiting the Guggenheim Museum with her friend Mary Pinchot Meyer to see H.H. Arnason's exhibition "American Abstract Expressionists and Imagists" in November 1961.[8] Truitt remembers that she "spent all that day looking at art…I saw Ad Reinhardt's black canvases, the blacks and the blues. Then I went on down the ramp and rounded the corner and..saw the paintings of Barnett Newman. I looked at them, and from that point on I was home free. I had never realized you could do it in art. Have enough space. Enough color." Truitt was especially inspired by the "universe of blue paint" and the subtle modulation and shades of color in Newman's Onement VI.[9] The singularity of the Abstract Expressionists that she observed in work by Barnett Newman and Ad Reinhardt struck Truitt and sparked a turning point in her work.[4]

 
Two (1962) at the National Gallery of Art in 2022

Truitt's first wood sculpture, titled First (1961), resembles a picket fence. It consists of three white vertical boards which come to a point—the pickets—which are braced from behind by a white post and two rails. The pickets, post, and rails are all attached to and visually grounded by a white base.[10] The forms contain memories of her past and her childhood geography, rather reflection of a "direct result of an empirical perception." First is a permeable memory of the idea of a fence, of all the fences Truitt has seen, instead of a fence modeled off of a specific image.[11] During a period spent in Japan with her husband, who at the time was the Japan bureau chief for Newsweek, she created aluminum sculptures from 1964 to 1967.[5] Before her first retrospective in New York she decided she did not like the works and destroyed them.[12]

 
Goldsborough (1974) at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2022

The sculptures that made her significant to the development of Minimalism were aggressively plain and painted structures, often large. Fabricated from wood and painted with monochromatic layers of acrylic, they often resemble sleek, rectangular columns or pillars.[13] Truitt produces in scale drawings of her structures that are then produced by a cabinetmaker. The structures are weighed to the ground and are often hollow, allowing the wood to breathe in changing temperatures. She applies gesso to prime the wood and then up to 40 coats of acrylic paint, alternating brushstrokes between horizontal and vertical directions and sanding between layers.[12] The artist sought to remove any trace of her brush, sanding down each layer of paint between applications and creating perfectly finished planes of colour.[13] The layers of paint build up a surface with tangible depth. Additionally, the palpable surface of paint conveys Truitt's ever-present sense of geography in the alternating vertical and horizontal paint strokes, which mirror the latitude and longitude of an environment. Her process combined "the immediacy of intuition, the remove of prefabrication, and the intimacy of laborious handwork."[14] The recessed platforms under her sculptures raised them just enough off the ground to appear to float on a thin line of shadow. The boundary between sculpture and ground, between gravity and verticality, was made illusory. This formal ambivalence is mirrored by her insistence that color itself, for instance, contained a psychological vibration which when purified, as it is on a work of art, isolates the event it refers to as a thing rather than a feeling. The event becomes a work of art, a visual sensation delivered by color. The Arundel series of paintings, begun in 1973,[13] features barely visible graphite lines and accumulations of white paint on white surfaces.[4] In the custard-color Ice Blink (1989), a tiny sliver of red at the bottom of the painting is enough to set up perspectival depth, as is a single bar of purple at the bottom of the otherwise sky-blue Memory (1981).[15] Begun around 2001, the Piths, canvases with deliberately frayed edges and covered in thick black strokes of paint, indicate Truitt's interest in forms that blur the lines between two and three dimensions.[4]

At her first show at André Emmerich's gallery, Truitt exhibited six works of hand-painted poplar structures, including Ship-Lap, Catawba, Tribute, Platte, and Hardcastle. André Emmerich would go on to be her longtime dealer. Truitt was introduced to Emmerich through Kenneth Noland, who Emmerich also represented. In accounts of her first solo show, one can see the chauvinistic undertones that were present in the 1960s New York art world. Greenberg, Rubin, and Noland chose Truitt's work to exhibit and organized the placement of the show without any input from Truitt herself. They often referred to her as the “gentle wife of James Truitt” and Emmerich encouraged Truitt to drop her first name to conceal her gender, in the hopes that this would help the exhibition's reception. After her first solo show, Greenberg declared in his essay "Recentness of Sculpture" (1967) that Truitt's work "anticipated" minimalist art. Greenberg's statement is sensationalist as Judd, Robert Morris, and Dan Flavin had showed their work prior to hers.[16]

Truitt's drawings are not often remembered when considering her body of work. For much of the 1950s, Truitt worked in pencil, acrylic, and ink to create not only studies for later sculptures, but drawings that existed independently as works of art.[17] Truitt is also known for three books she wrote, Daybook, Turn, and Prospect, all journals. In Prospect, her third volume of reflections, Truitt set out to reconsider her "whole experience as an artist"—and also as a daughter, mother, grandmother, teacher and lifelong seeker.[18] For many years she was associated with the University of Maryland, College Park, where she was a professor, and the artists' colony Yaddo, where she served as interim president.

Truitt died on December 23, 2004, at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C., of complications following abdominal surgery.[6] She was survived by three children and eight grandchildren, among them writer Charles Finch.[19] Her daughter Mary Truitt Hill was married to the art critic Charlie Finch (1953/1954-2022) and they are in turn the parents of the aforementioned Charles.[20]

Legacy edit

Fielding, H. (2011) Multiple Moving Perceptions of the Real: Arendt, Merleau-Ponty, and Truitt (pages 518–534) This paper explores the ethical insights provided by Anne Truitt's minimalist sculptures, as viewed through the phenomenological lenses of Hannah Arendt's investigations into the co-constitution of reality and Maurice Merleau-Ponty's investigations into perception. Artworks in their material presence can lay out new ways of relating and perceiving. Truitt's works accomplish this task by revealing the interactive motion of our embodied relations and how material objects can actually help to ground our reality and hence human potentiality. Merleau-Ponty shows how our prereflective bodies allow incompossible perceptions to coexist. Yet this same capacity of bodies to gather multiple perceptions together also lends itself to the illusion that we see from only one perspective. If an ethical perspective becomes reified into one position, it then becomes detached from reality, and the ethical potential is actually lost. At the same time, phenomenologically understood, the real world does not exist in terms of static matter, but is instead a web of contextual relations and meanings. An ethics that does not take embodied relations into account—that allows for only one perspective—ultimately loses its capacity for flexibility, and for being part of a common and shared reality.

Exhibitions edit

Truitt's first one-person exhibition was at the André Emmerich Gallery, New York, in February 1963, and in many senses her work also hews to what was emerging there. Her work was included in the 1964 exhibition, "Black, White, and Gray," at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford, Ct, arguably the first exhibition of Minimal work. She was one of only three women included in the influential 1966 exhibition, Primary Structures at the Jewish Museum in New York. Her work has since been the subject of one-person exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1973); the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. (1974); and the Baltimore Museum of Art (1974, 1992). In 2009, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C., organized an acclaimed retrospective of her work,[21] including 49 sculptures and 35 paintings and drawings.[12] "In the Tower: Anne Truitt" was on view at the National Gallery of Art from Nov. 19, 2017 to April 1, 2018.[22]

Works in collections edit

Arizona

District of Columbia

  • Keep, 1962, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington
  • Insurrection, 1962, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington; acquired in 2014 by the National Gallery of Art[23]
  • Flower, 1969, Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington; acquired in 2015 by the National Gallery of Art[24]
  • Arundel XI, 1971, National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • Summer Dryad, 1971, National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington
  • Mid-Day, 1972, National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • Spume, 1972, National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • 13 October 1973, 1973, Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington
  • Sand Morning, 1973, National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • 17th Summer, 1974, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington
  • Night Naiad, 1977, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington
  • Parva XII, 1977, National Gallery of Art, Washington
  • Summer Remembered, 1981, National Gallery of Art
  • Twining Court II, 2002, National Gallery of Art

Maryland

  • Ship-Lap, 1962, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Watauga, 1962, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Whale's Eye, 1969, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Three, 1962, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • A Wall for Apricots, 1968, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Meadow Child, 1969, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Odeskalki, 1963/82, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Parva IV, 1974, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Lea, 1962, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Carson, 1963, Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore
  • Moon Lily, 1988, Academy Art Museum, Easton
  • Summer '88 No. 25, 1988, Academy Art Museum, Easton
  • Hesperides, 1989, Academy Art Museum, Easton
  • Summer '96 No. 26. 1996, Academy Art Museum, Easton

Michigan

Minnesota

Missouri

Nebraska

New York

North Carolina

Virginia

Wisconsin

Bibliography edit

  • Truitt, Anne (1984-03-06). Daybook: The Journal of an Artist. Harmondsworth, Middlesex, England; New York, N.Y: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-006963-1.
  • Truitt, Anne (1987-11-03). Turn: The Journal of an Artist. New York, N.Y: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-009249-3.
  • Truitt, Anne (1996-03-04). Prospect: The Journal of an Artist (1st ed.). New York: Scribner. ISBN 978-0-684-81835-1.
  • Truitt, Anne (2024-03-26). Au Fil des jours, Le Journal d'une artiste, French translation by Catherine Vasseur of DayBook : The Journal of an Artist. Paris : ER Publishing ISBN 978-2-493808-07-3

References edit

  1. ^ Schudel, Matt (2004-12-23). "Minimalist Sculptor Anne Truitt, 83, Dies". The Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-03-22.
  2. ^ Biographical Sketch by Walter Hopps December 15, 2010, at the Wayback Machine retrieved February 10, 2010
  3. ^ "At Matthew Marks, Anne Truitt is Modest as a Picket Fence". 2015-12-07.
  4. ^ a b c d e Anne Truitt: Perception and Reflection, October 8, 2009 - January 3, 2010 December 1, 2017, at the Wayback Machine Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
  5. ^ a b Oral history interview with Anne Truitt, 2002 Apr.-Aug Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
  6. ^ a b Anne Truitt, 83; Sculptor Chronicled Life as Artist, Wife, Mother Los Angeles Times, December 30, 2004.
  7. ^ "Mother-in-law by Charlie Finch". artnet.com. Retrieved 15 June 2023.
  8. ^ Meyer, James (2000). Minimalism. London: Phaidon. p. 63. ISBN 9780714834603.
  9. ^ Munro, Eleanor C. (1979). Originals: American Women Artists. New York: Simon and Schuster. p. 314. ISBN 9780671231095.
  10. ^ Byrd, Anne (December 2009). "ANNE TRUITT: Perception and Reflection". The Brooklyn Rail.
  11. ^ Meyer, James (2000). Minimalism. London: Phaidon. p. 70. ISBN 9780714834603.
  12. ^ a b c Ken Johnson (December 10, 2009), Where Ancient and Future Intersect The New York Times.
  13. ^ a b c Anne Truitt: Works From The Estate, 10 October - 19 November 2011 Stephen Friedman Gallery, London.
  14. ^ Cornelia, Butler; Schwartz, Alexandra (2010). Modern Women: Women Artists at the Museum of Modern Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art. p. 252.
  15. ^ Holland Cotter (March 9, 2001), ART IN REVIEW; Anne Truitt The New York Times.
  16. ^ Meyer, James (2000). Minimalism. London: Phaidon. pp. 63–73. ISBN 9780714834603.
  17. ^ Butler, Cornelia; Schwartz, Alexandra (2010). Modern Women: Women Artists at the Museum of Modern Art. New York: Museum of Modern Art.
  18. ^ Alix Kates Shulman (April 28, 1996), Portrait of the Artist as an Old Woman Los Angeles Times.
  19. ^ Finch, Charles (2 November 2016). "The Forgotten Novel That Inspired Homesickness for an Imaginary Land". The New Yorker. Retrieved 5 November 2016.
  20. ^ Harney, John (4 March 2011). "Emily Popp, Charles Finch III". The New York Times.
  21. ^ Anne Truitt: Drawings, February 4 - April 14, 2012 Matthew Marks Gallery, New York.
  22. ^ "In the Tower: Anne Truitt". www.nga.gov. Retrieved 4 June 2019.
  23. ^ "Anne Truitt Insurrection Provenance". National Gallery of Art - Collections. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  24. ^ "Anne Truitt - Flower". National Gallery of Art - Collections. Retrieved June 4, 2019.
  25. ^ "Exchange: 2 Feb '78". exchange.umma.umich.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-09.
  26. ^ "Exchange: Sandcastle". exchange.umma.umich.edu. Retrieved 2020-03-09.
  27. ^ . eMuseum.com. Archived from the original on 2011-07-21. Retrieved 2010-03-23.
  28. ^ "Collection". kemperartmuseum.wustl.edu.
  29. ^ "Still". sheldonartgallery.org.

Sources edit

  • Anne Truitt, Acknowledgements by Roy Slade & Walter Hopps, Copyright 1974 The Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.: printed by Garamond/Pridemark Press, Baltimore, MD LCCC#75-78522
  • Hopps, Walter. Anne Truitt, Retrospective: Sculpture and Drawings, 1961-1973. Washington, D.C.: Corcoran Gallery of Art, 1974.
  • Livingston, Jane. Anne Truitt: Sculpture 1961 – 1991. New York: André Emmerich Gallery, 1991.
  • Meyer, James. Anne Truitt: Early Drawings and Sculpture, 1958-1963. Atlanta: Michael C. Carlos Museum, 2003.

External links edit

  • Anne Truitt website
  • Artforum James Meyer interview
  • The Washington Post obituary
  • Artnet images of Truitt's work

anne, truitt, march, 1921, december, 2004, born, anne, dean, american, sculptor, 20th, century, wall, apricots, 1968bornanne, dean, 1921, march, 1921baltimore, maryland, dieddecember, 2004, 2004, aged, washington, nationalityamericanknown, forsculpture, color,. Anne Truitt March 16 1921 December 23 2004 1 born Anne Dean was an American sculptor of the mid 20th century Anne TruittA Wall for Apricots 1968BornAnne Dean 1921 03 16 March 16 1921Baltimore Maryland U S DiedDecember 23 2004 2004 12 23 aged 83 Washington D C U S NationalityAmericanKnown forSculpture Color FieldMovementMinimalism She became well known in the late 1960s for her large scale minimalist sculptures especially after influential solo shows at Andre Emmerich Gallery in 1963 and the Jewish Museum Manhattan in 1966 Unlike her contemporaries she made her own sculptures by hand eschewing industrial processes Drawing from imagery from her past her work also deals with the visual trace of memory and nostalgia 2 This is exemplified by a series of early sculptures resembling monumental segments of white picket fence 3 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Work 3 Legacy 4 Exhibitions 5 Works in collections 6 Bibliography 7 References 8 Sources 9 External linksEarly life and education editTruitt grew up in Easton on Maryland s Eastern Shore and spent her teenage years in Asheville North Carolina 4 She graduated from Bryn Mawr College with a degree in psychology in 1943 She declined an offer to pursue a Ph D in Yale University s psychology department and worked briefly as a nurse 5 in a psychiatric ward at Massachusetts General Hospital Boston 6 She left the field of psychology in the mid 1940s first writing fiction and then enrolling in courses offered by the Institute of Contemporary Art in Washington D C 4 She married the journalist James Truitt in 1947 though they divorced in 1971 It was said that James used to tease about Anne s columnar sculptures in referring to the works as telephone booths 7 Work editAfter leaving the field of clinical psychology in the mid 1940s Truitt began making figurative sculptures but turned toward reduced geometric forms after visiting the Guggenheim Museum with her friend Mary Pinchot Meyer to see H H Arnason s exhibition American Abstract Expressionists and Imagists in November 1961 8 Truitt remembers that she spent all that day looking at art I saw Ad Reinhardt s black canvases the blacks and the blues Then I went on down the ramp and rounded the corner and saw the paintings of Barnett Newman I looked at them and from that point on I was home free I had never realized you could do it in art Have enough space Enough color Truitt was especially inspired by the universe of blue paint and the subtle modulation and shades of color in Newman s Onement VI 9 The singularity of the Abstract Expressionists that she observed in work by Barnett Newman and Ad Reinhardt struck Truitt and sparked a turning point in her work 4 nbsp Two 1962 at the National Gallery of Art in 2022 Truitt s first wood sculpture titled First 1961 resembles a picket fence It consists of three white vertical boards which come to a point the pickets which are braced from behind by a white post and two rails The pickets post and rails are all attached to and visually grounded by a white base 10 The forms contain memories of her past and her childhood geography rather reflection of a direct result of an empirical perception First is a permeable memory of the idea of a fence of all the fences Truitt has seen instead of a fence modeled off of a specific image 11 During a period spent in Japan with her husband who at the time was the Japan bureau chief for Newsweek she created aluminum sculptures from 1964 to 1967 5 Before her first retrospective in New York she decided she did not like the works and destroyed them 12 nbsp Goldsborough 1974 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in 2022 The sculptures that made her significant to the development of Minimalism were aggressively plain and painted structures often large Fabricated from wood and painted with monochromatic layers of acrylic they often resemble sleek rectangular columns or pillars 13 Truitt produces in scale drawings of her structures that are then produced by a cabinetmaker The structures are weighed to the ground and are often hollow allowing the wood to breathe in changing temperatures She applies gesso to prime the wood and then up to 40 coats of acrylic paint alternating brushstrokes between horizontal and vertical directions and sanding between layers 12 The artist sought to remove any trace of her brush sanding down each layer of paint between applications and creating perfectly finished planes of colour 13 The layers of paint build up a surface with tangible depth Additionally the palpable surface of paint conveys Truitt s ever present sense of geography in the alternating vertical and horizontal paint strokes which mirror the latitude and longitude of an environment Her process combined the immediacy of intuition the remove of prefabrication and the intimacy of laborious handwork 14 The recessed platforms under her sculptures raised them just enough off the ground to appear to float on a thin line of shadow The boundary between sculpture and ground between gravity and verticality was made illusory This formal ambivalence is mirrored by her insistence that color itself for instance contained a psychological vibration which when purified as it is on a work of art isolates the event it refers to as a thing rather than a feeling The event becomes a work of art a visual sensation delivered by color The Arundel series of paintings begun in 1973 13 features barely visible graphite lines and accumulations of white paint on white surfaces 4 In the custard color Ice Blink 1989 a tiny sliver of red at the bottom of the painting is enough to set up perspectival depth as is a single bar of purple at the bottom of the otherwise sky blue Memory 1981 15 Begun around 2001 the Piths canvases with deliberately frayed edges and covered in thick black strokes of paint indicate Truitt s interest in forms that blur the lines between two and three dimensions 4 At her first show at Andre Emmerich s gallery Truitt exhibited six works of hand painted poplar structures including Ship Lap Catawba Tribute Platte and Hardcastle Andre Emmerich would go on to be her longtime dealer Truitt was introduced to Emmerich through Kenneth Noland who Emmerich also represented In accounts of her first solo show one can see the chauvinistic undertones that were present in the 1960s New York art world Greenberg Rubin and Noland chose Truitt s work to exhibit and organized the placement of the show without any input from Truitt herself They often referred to her as the gentle wife of James Truitt and Emmerich encouraged Truitt to drop her first name to conceal her gender in the hopes that this would help the exhibition s reception After her first solo show Greenberg declared in his essay Recentness of Sculpture 1967 that Truitt s work anticipated minimalist art Greenberg s statement is sensationalist as Judd Robert Morris and Dan Flavin had showed their work prior to hers 16 Truitt s drawings are not often remembered when considering her body of work For much of the 1950s Truitt worked in pencil acrylic and ink to create not only studies for later sculptures but drawings that existed independently as works of art 17 Truitt is also known for three books she wrote Daybook Turn and Prospect all journals In Prospect her third volume of reflections Truitt set out to reconsider her whole experience as an artist and also as a daughter mother grandmother teacher and lifelong seeker 18 For many years she was associated with the University of Maryland College Park where she was a professor and the artists colony Yaddo where she served as interim president Truitt died on December 23 2004 at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington D C of complications following abdominal surgery 6 She was survived by three children and eight grandchildren among them writer Charles Finch 19 Her daughter Mary Truitt Hill was married to the art critic Charlie Finch 1953 1954 2022 and they are in turn the parents of the aforementioned Charles 20 Legacy editFielding H 2011 Multiple Moving Perceptions of the Real Arendt Merleau Ponty and Truitt pages 518 534 This paper explores the ethical insights provided by Anne Truitt s minimalist sculptures as viewed through the phenomenological lenses of Hannah Arendt s investigations into the co constitution of reality and Maurice Merleau Ponty s investigations into perception Artworks in their material presence can lay out new ways of relating and perceiving Truitt s works accomplish this task by revealing the interactive motion of our embodied relations and how material objects can actually help to ground our reality and hence human potentiality Merleau Ponty shows how our prereflective bodies allow incompossible perceptions to coexist Yet this same capacity of bodies to gather multiple perceptions together also lends itself to the illusion that we see from only one perspective If an ethical perspective becomes reified into one position it then becomes detached from reality and the ethical potential is actually lost At the same time phenomenologically understood the real world does not exist in terms of static matter but is instead a web of contextual relations and meanings An ethics that does not take embodied relations into account that allows for only one perspective ultimately loses its capacity for flexibility and for being part of a common and shared reality Exhibitions editTruitt s first one person exhibition was at the Andre Emmerich Gallery New York in February 1963 and in many senses her work also hews to what was emerging there Her work was included in the 1964 exhibition Black White and Gray at the Wadsworth Atheneum in Hartford Ct arguably the first exhibition of Minimal work She was one of only three women included in the influential 1966 exhibition Primary Structures at the Jewish Museum in New York Her work has since been the subject of one person exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art New York 1973 the Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington D C 1974 and the Baltimore Museum of Art 1974 1992 In 2009 the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington D C organized an acclaimed retrospective of her work 21 including 49 sculptures and 35 paintings and drawings 12 In the Tower Anne Truitt was on view at the National Gallery of Art from Nov 19 2017 to April 1 2018 22 Works in collections editArizona Summer Treat 1968 University of Arizona Museum of Art Tucson District of Columbia Keep 1962 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington Insurrection 1962 Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington acquired in 2014 by the National Gallery of Art 23 Flower 1969 Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington acquired in 2015 by the National Gallery of Art 24 Arundel XI 1971 National Gallery of Art Washington Summer Dryad 1971 National Museum of Women in the Arts Washington Mid Day 1972 National Gallery of Art Washington Spume 1972 National Gallery of Art Washington 13 October 1973 1973 Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington Sand Morning 1973 National Gallery of Art Washington 17th Summer 1974 Smithsonian American Art Museum Washington Night Naiad 1977 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington Parva XII 1977 National Gallery of Art Washington Summer Remembered 1981 National Gallery of Art Twining Court II 2002 National Gallery of Art Maryland Ship Lap 1962 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Watauga 1962 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Whale s Eye 1969 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Three 1962 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore A Wall for Apricots 1968 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Meadow Child 1969 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Odeskalki 1963 82 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Parva IV 1974 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Lea 1962 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Carson 1963 Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Moon Lily 1988 Academy Art Museum Easton Summer 88 No 25 1988 Academy Art Museum Easton Hesperides 1989 Academy Art Museum Easton Summer 96 No 26 1996 Academy Art Museum Easton Michigan 2 Feb 78 1978 University of Michigan Museum of Art Ann Arbor 25 Sandcastle 1984 University of Michigan Museum of Art Ann Arbor 26 Minnesota Australian Spring 1972 Walker Art Center Minneapolis Missouri Morning Choice 1968 St Louis Art Museum St Louis 27 Prima 1978 Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum St Louis 28 Nebraska Still 1999 Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery University of Nebraska Lincoln 29 New York Sentinel 1978 Albright Knox Art Gallery Buffalo Carolina Noon Michael C Rockefeller Arts Center New York Catawba 1962 Museum of Modern Art New York Twining Court I 2001 Museum of Modern Art New York Untitled 1962 Museum of Modern Art New York Desert Reach 1971 Whitney Museum of American Art New York North Carolina Night Wing 1972 78 Mint Museum Charlotte Stone South No 36 1975 North Carolina Museum of Art Raleigh Virginia Signal 1978 Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond Richmond Wisconsin Summer Sentinel 1963 72 Milwaukee Art Museum MilwaukeeBibliography editTruitt Anne 1984 03 06 Daybook The Journal of an Artist Harmondsworth Middlesex England New York N Y Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 006963 1 Truitt Anne 1987 11 03 Turn The Journal of an Artist New York N Y Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 009249 3 Truitt Anne 1996 03 04 Prospect The Journal of an Artist 1st ed New York Scribner ISBN 978 0 684 81835 1 Truitt Anne 2024 03 26 Au Fil des jours Le Journal d une artiste French translation by Catherine Vasseur of DayBook The Journal of an Artist Paris ER Publishing ISBN 978 2 493808 07 3References edit Schudel Matt 2004 12 23 Minimalist Sculptor Anne Truitt 83 Dies The Washington Post Retrieved 2008 03 22 Biographical Sketch by Walter Hopps Archived December 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine retrieved February 10 2010 At Matthew Marks Anne Truitt is Modest as a Picket Fence 2015 12 07 a b c d e Anne Truitt Perception and Reflection October 8 2009 January 3 2010 Archived December 1 2017 at the Wayback Machine Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington D C a b Oral history interview with Anne Truitt 2002 Apr Aug Archives of American Art Smithsonian Institution a b Anne Truitt 83 Sculptor Chronicled Life as Artist Wife Mother Los Angeles Times December 30 2004 Mother in law by Charlie Finch artnet com Retrieved 15 June 2023 Meyer James 2000 Minimalism London Phaidon p 63 ISBN 9780714834603 Munro Eleanor C 1979 Originals American Women Artists New York Simon and Schuster p 314 ISBN 9780671231095 Byrd Anne December 2009 ANNE TRUITT Perception and Reflection The Brooklyn Rail Meyer James 2000 Minimalism London Phaidon p 70 ISBN 9780714834603 a b c Ken Johnson December 10 2009 Where Ancient and Future Intersect The New York Times a b c Anne Truitt Works From The Estate 10 October 19 November 2011 Stephen Friedman Gallery London Cornelia Butler Schwartz Alexandra 2010 Modern Women Women Artists at the Museum of Modern Art New York Museum of Modern Art p 252 Holland Cotter March 9 2001 ART IN REVIEW Anne Truitt The New York Times Meyer James 2000 Minimalism London Phaidon pp 63 73 ISBN 9780714834603 Butler Cornelia Schwartz Alexandra 2010 Modern Women Women Artists at the Museum of Modern Art New York Museum of Modern Art Alix Kates Shulman April 28 1996 Portrait of the Artist as an Old Woman Los Angeles Times Finch Charles 2 November 2016 The Forgotten Novel That Inspired Homesickness for an Imaginary Land The New Yorker Retrieved 5 November 2016 Harney John 4 March 2011 Emily Popp Charles Finch III The New York Times Anne Truitt Drawings February 4 April 14 2012 Matthew Marks Gallery New York In the Tower Anne Truitt www nga gov Retrieved 4 June 2019 Anne Truitt Insurrection Provenance National Gallery of Art Collections Retrieved June 4 2019 Anne Truitt Flower National Gallery of Art Collections Retrieved June 4 2019 Exchange 2 Feb 78 exchange umma umich edu Retrieved 2020 03 09 Exchange Sandcastle exchange umma umich edu Retrieved 2020 03 09 Saint Louis Art Museum Collections Modern Art eMuseum com Archived from the original on 2011 07 21 Retrieved 2010 03 23 Collection kemperartmuseum wustl edu Still sheldonartgallery org Sources editAnne Truitt Acknowledgements by Roy Slade amp Walter Hopps Copyright 1974 The Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington D C printed by Garamond Pridemark Press Baltimore MD LCCC 75 78522 Hopps Walter Anne Truitt Retrospective Sculpture and Drawings 1961 1973 Washington D C Corcoran Gallery of Art 1974 Livingston Jane Anne Truitt Sculpture 1961 1991 New York Andre Emmerich Gallery 1991 Meyer James Anne Truitt Early Drawings and Sculpture 1958 1963 Atlanta Michael C Carlos Museum 2003 External links editAnne Truitt website Artforum James Meyer interview The Washington Post obituary Artnet images of Truitt s work Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anne Truitt amp oldid 1217202907, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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