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Wikipedia

Dennis Ashbaugh

Dennis John Ashbaugh (born 1946 in Red Oak, Iowa[1]) is an American painter and artist who resides in River House in New York City, and also lives and works in Millbrook and Pawling, New York.

Dennis Ashbaugh
Born1946
NationalityAmerican
Known forAbstract art
Notable workAgrippa (a book of the dead)
AwardsGuggenheim Memorial Fellowship

Themes and influences edit

As much as possible, Ashbaugh has avoided being labeled or categorized by various contemporary “isms”: Minimalism, Abstract Expressionism, Popism, op art or Color Field Painting. The constant through-line of Ashbaugh’s abstract work is a focus on specific current events as seen through the prism of art history, such as the future, politics, computers, clones, DNA, networks and viruses (computer and biological), though he does not use computers to create these works.

In 1992, Ashbaugh collaborated with science fiction and cyberpunk novelist William Gibson on the electronic poem Agrippa (A Book of the Dead).[2] Ashbaugh cites Gibson and fellow cyberpunk novelist Bruce Sterling as key influences, as well as Barnett Newman, Jackson Pollock, and Mark Rothko.[3][4]

Early life edit

Ashbaugh’s grandfathers were a blacksmith and a large landowner and farmer, his father, an electrical planner, and mother, a beautician. The Ashbaugh family moved to Anaheim, California, where as a child he intently watched the construction of Disneyland.

A major influence in Ashbaugh’s life was the newly born California surfing scene of the 1950s and 1960s[5]—the era of surfing greats Phil Edwards, Hobart “Hobie” Alter, Gordon “Grubby" Clark, Carter Pyle, and Bruce Brown with whom he surfed. In 1961, his parents bought a trailer on the ocean in San Clemente, down from where most of the Dana Point Mafia resided.[6] The freedom and independence of surfing shaped his worldview both aesthetically and intellectually.

Throughout his college years, Ashbaugh painted with oil or any paint he could get his hands on, often working on oversize canvases. He received a master's degree in 1969 from California State University, Fullerton. At the age of 19, he met Frank Stella, Barbara Rose, Alan Solomon and Leo Castelli. Stella offered him the use of his studio in Costa Mesa, California, and later encouraged Ashbaugh to move to and paint in New York City.

Murray Street: “The Ovals” (1970) edit

Through Stella, Rose and others, Ashbaugh was introduced to many of the well-known working artists, performers, collectors, and gallery owners in New York City, many of whom frequented Max’s Kansas City, such as John Chamberlain, Andy Warhol, Larry Poons, Nancy Graves, Carl André, Brice Marden, Robert Rauschenberg.

Ashbaugh leased a studio on Murray Street in Tribeca. He began working on a series entitled “The Ovals” (a reference to Larry Poons): Large fiberglass paintings using an elliptical format and drums of polyester resin. The unyielding, flat surfaces and intentionally ragged edges, obliquely allude to the matte encaustic surfaces that Brice Marden and Jasper Johns were using at the time, albeit with a California twist.

These paintings and drawings evolved directly from the artwork last painted in Costa Mesa, California, and were exhibited at the Orange County Museum of Art (formerly the Newport Harbor Art Museum), the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (formerly La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art).[7]

Greene Street: “The Shineys” (1971–1972) edit

In 1971, the art dealer Ileana Sonnabend and Henry Geldzahler, Director of Contemporary Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, connected Ashbaugh to a space in the center of SoHo. Ashbaugh then sold his Murray Street loft to performance artist Laurie Anderson and moved to 67 Greene Street, a space capable of accommodating his large paintings. Here, Ashbaugh began “The Shineys”—a series of fiberglass paintings, many as large as 120” by 240”. The surfaces were glass-like, using polyester resin, industrial dyes and pigments.

The Shineys were exhibited in solo exhibitions in Sweden [Galleri Ostegren, Malmö, Sweden], and California (Jack Glenn Gallery, Corona del Mar, California), and acquired by the Orange County Museum of Art (formerly the Newport Harbor Art Museum), the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego (formerly La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art), and the owners of Artforum Magazine.[7]

Whitney Museum Solo Exhibition: Russian Agitprop Series (1975) edit

Due to the 1973 Oil Crisis, the use of 50-gallon drums of polyester resins became untenable as prices soared beyond Ashbaugh's means. For inspiration, Ashbaugh turned to the Russian Revolution of 1917, the beginning of abstract, non-objective painting with Malevich, Tatlin, and Lissitzky who themselves were abandoned by the state. Ashbaugh’s paintings were extremely large (approximately 120 x 240 inches) and came away six inches from the wall. The hues were limited to primary colors with an unsettling inclusion of a tertiary palette. They were made with oil, and beeswax using an encaustic process, and titled in Russian.

In 1975, the entire series, curated by Marcia Tucker, became a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum,[8] as well as in Belgium (Galerie Alexandria Monett, Brussels) and France (Galerie Farideh Cadot, Paris).[7]

Laguna Canyon: The Tijuana to Canada Series (1975–1976) edit

Ashbaugh decided to make work in the warmer months in Laguna Beach, California, where he leased an unfinished indoor-outdoor building with 50-foot ceilings, without doors or windows. He lived in a scaffolding to avoid scorpions and rattlesnakes.

While moving studio equipment from New York to the Canyon Studio, Ashbaugh heard loud noises and sonic booms. Flying at Mach speed, stealth bombers from Camp Pendleton and El Toro Marine Base were practice-flying up and down the canyon corridor. Their twisting, foreshortened configurations were reminiscent to Ashbaugh of the Suprematism work of Malevich and Lissitzky. Further, the planes were constructed with a precursor to Vantablack which disguises all contours. Ashbaugh created large, unwieldy-shaped canvases with the flattest matte paint then available. The paintings were titled for the test flight corridor being used from Tijuana to Canada.

Ashbaugh was awarded the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 1976.[9]

Greene Street Studio: The Nazca Series (1976–1977) edit

In 1976, Thomas M. Messer, Director of the Guggenheim Museum of Art in New York, recruited Ashbaugh to help organize and install Alfred Jensen's exhibition for the São Paulo Art Biennial representing the United States. While completing the installation, Ashbaugh became aware of the earthworks that were championed by Virginia Dwan, Michael Heizer, Robert Smithson, and Walter De Maria and that were being created in the Nevada desert.

Ashbaugh traveled to Peru, flew over the Nazca Lines, and contacted Maria Reiche, the German scholar and mathematician who had been studying cataloging and protecting the drawings in Nazca since 1946. When Ashbaugh returned to New York City, he began construction of the heavily contorted and large 10'x20' shaped Nazca canvas paintings. Ashbaugh thought of them as anthropomorphized planar geometry or as alien landing strips and imagined them placed on a wall vertically, not flat on the ground as in the earthworks in Nazca and Nevada.

Founder Alanna Heiss at PS1 Project Room in Brooklyn, now the Museum of Modern Art, curated the construction and installation of the work influenced by the Peru trip.[7]

San Onofre Woofers Series: Double and Triple Shadows (1979–1984) edit

At the Dia Art Foundation, Ashbaugh saw from Andy Warhol’s Hammer and Sickle work,[10] that two shapes, even three distinct shapes, would cast only one combined shadow. He began a series paintings with multiple images but only one combined shadow. These works are loosely painted in fluorescents with swaths of glow-in-the-dark pigments. Seen with the lights off, they eerily resemble the frenetic brushwork of Willem de Kooning or Franz Kline. Ashbaugh became fascinated by the new technology of paint chemistry and also applied flocking to the surfaces.

Since 1974, Ashbaugh has focused on First Amendment rights with concern for the degradation of journalistic news into a propaganda tool or a pop culture sales hook. In 1979, The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City acquired a 108”x108” inch painting from the series titled “New Yorker Faces Iran Spy Trial.”[11] The title came from a headline of the sensationalist tabloid the New York Post, as was each painting in the entire Woofer Series.[12]

Ashbaugh’s San Onofre Series (1980) had solo exhibitions at Knoedler Kasmin Gallery in London, the Richard Gray Gallery in Chicago, the Janie C. Lee Gallery, Houston, as well as acquisitions by the Hirshhorn Museum of Art in Washington, D.C. and at Stanford University, the Orange County Museum of Art, and the Houston Museum of Fine Arts. These paintings were exhibited globally, traveling to England, Portugal, Australia, and South Africa. Natalie Knight Gallery (Johannesburg, South Africa), the Gulbenkian Foundation (Lisbon, Portugal), and the Swiss Art Foundation (Switzerland).[7]

The Fashion World Exploits (1983–1984) edit

In 1983, Anna Wintour, the newly appointed editor of New York Magazine, asked a group of artists, including Dennis Ashbaugh, Jean-Michel Basquiat, David Salle, for permission to include their work in a fashion shoot for publication. The issue was called “The Art Beat.” Wintour was taken by way that Ashbaugh had incorporated the models into the staged artwork and made the decision to use this image as the magazine’s centerfold. When told of the image’s placement Ashbaugh requested that the centerfold become a scratch and sniff that smelled of the models’ perfume, a tribute to old porn magazines, a proposal that was of course rejected. The popular issue elevated Ms. Wintour to the position of editor in chief of Vogue. Ms. Wintour and Alexander Liberman commissioned Ashbaugh to do an eight-page spread for Condé Nast using his brightly colored images.[13][14]

Interactive Paintings: The Clone Series (1987) edit

With the many advancements in DNA and computer technologies, Ashbaugh believed there must be a viable path forward for abstract painting. As Barbara Rose stated, “Like Pollock, Ashbaugh is keenly aware that innovations in technology require a thoughtful response from artists who are awake to their own time.”[15] He began working on the large-scale, colorful Clone Series, conceptually based on the idea that entirety of art history could be placed on a single floppy disk. These paintings were shown in a retrospective at IVAM in Valencia, Spain, 2007.[7]

Computer Viruses (1988–1990) edit

In 1988 the first computer virus was created by Robert Tappan Morris, a Cornell University student.[16] Ashbaugh recognized it as a major technological and cultural event where computer information could be created then co-opted and deleted. He perceived this as a paradigm shift—that information would never again be the same. Reminded of Robert Rauschenberg’s erasure of the Willem de Kooning drawing,[17] Ashbaugh embarked on painting a series of large black and fluorescent works using the visual images located in the aftermath of a virus attack, or in his words, “a new beginning.”[18] The works were painted with glossy industrial floor enamel and epoxy, appearing as blank television screens with color charts, inserted on either the upper or lower framing edge. Solo exhibitions followed at the Marisa del Re Gallery, Paul Kasmin Gallery, and IVAM (Valencia, Spain).[7]

DNA Gene Stain Paintings (1989–1990) edit

The Human Genome Project, launched in 1990 by James Watson and Craig Venter gave Ashbaugh the idea of the Gene Stain Paintings. He used washes of color, alluding to Morris Louis’s stain paintings and subtle markings on large-scale canvases.

When art history scholar and critic Robert Rosenblum first saw this work in the 1990, he remarked "Why would anyone want to make stain paintings now"?[19] Ashbaugh reminded the critic that as early as 1946, Barnett Newman had painted a work titled “The Genetic Moment.” [20] Ashbaugh executed these paintings at various makeshift outdoor studios due to the extreme toxicity of the paints used.

The Gene Stain Paintings were exhibited at the National Academy of Sciences,[21] the Marisa del Re Gallery,[22] the Paul Kasmin Gallery and IVAM. Print editions were acquired by Microsoft Corporation, Lincoln Center, and State Department Art Collections in Embassies. [7]

Agrippa (A Book of the Dead) (1992) edit

A collaborative book by the founder of cyberpunk, William Gibson and Dennis Ashbaugh was published in 1992 in two limited editions (Deluxe and Small) and entitled Agrippa (A Book of the Dead). The book included copperplate aquatint etchings (Ashbaugh) and a poem (Gibson).

See separate Wikipedia entry: Agrippa (A Book of the Dead)

Degraded DNA Paintings (1995–1996) edit

In the early 1990s, there was much discussion in the forensic and scientific communities, as well as in the culture at large, as to what fraction of DNA was required to make an accurate analysis of ancestry, race and origin. Working outdoors, Ashbaugh became aware of rust as well as the elements of sun, acid rain, and snow to cause entropic decay. He used Corten steel dust, and fugitive fluorescent pigments, which degrade with ultraviolet rays, on large canvases and placed them outside for a year. The components turned into a rich rusted patina on 108”x108” canvases. They resembled used paintings and made allusions to the paintings of Anselm Kieffer and Julian Schnabel and were exhibited at Marisa del Re Gallery and IVAM.[7]

Hiding in Plain Sight (2004–2007) edit

The issues of privacy and identity became a deep concern for Ashbaugh. In 2006, the company 23andMe, began selling DNA kits for purposes of genealogical inquiry—individual heritage studies for home use—accumulating vast quantities of data. Later at the Whitehead Institute in Cambridge Massachusetts, Ashbaugh met Yaniv Erlich an Israeli scientist whose laboratory had just determined that no genetic information is private and can be accessed by anyone.

Ashbaugh had been painting large DNA works with saturated colors like the washes of his earlier series. Each of the brightly colored paintings of a typical human genetic sequence were now covered with camouflage so that any adequate reading of the sequence could not be accurately determined.[23]

This series was shown at IVAM in Valencia, Spain, as a part of the major 2007 Ashbaugh retrospective organized by critic Barbara Rose,[24] and at the National Academy of Sciences.[7][25]

Personal life edit

He is the longtime companion of author Alexandra Penney. He has been characterized by the New York Times as a "charismatic ex‐surfer whose address book can probably hold its own against that of the most aggressive jet set type".[26]

Awards edit

Selected solo exhibitions[29] edit

  • Institut Valencia d’Art Modern IVAM (a retrospective of works), Valencia, Spain (2007)
  • National Academy of Sciences, Washington, DC (2006)
  • Margulies-Taplan Gallery, Miami, FL (1994)
  • Marisa, del Re Gallery, New York, NY (1993)
  • Goode Crowley Editions, Houston, TX (1993)
  • The Americas Society, New York, NY (1992)
  • The Metropolitan Museum of Art Mezzanine Gallery, New York, NY (1992)
  • The Kitchen, New York, NY (1992)
  • Margulies-Taplan Gallery, Miami, FL (1990)
  • Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York, NY (1990)
  • Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York, NY (1989)
  • Charles Cowles Gallery, New York, NY (1982)
  • Richard Gray Gallery, Chicago, IL (1982)
  • Charles Cowles Gallery, New York, NY (1982)
  • Kasmin-Knoedler Gallery, London, England (1981)
  • Charles Cowles Gallery, New York, NY (1980)
  • Janie C. Lee Gallery, Houston, TX (1980)
  • Galerie Farideh Cadot, Paris, France (1979)
  • PS I, Long Island City Project Rooms, NY (1977)
  • Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA (1976)
  • Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY (1975)
  • Galleri Ostergren, Malmö, Sweden (1972)
  • Newport Harbor Art Museum, Newport Beach, CA (1971)
  • Gallery Farideh Cadot, Paris, France (1970)
  • La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, La Jolla, CA (1970)

Selected Collections[30] edit

  • Boca Raton Museum of Art, FL
  • Brooklyn Museum, NY
  • Crocker National Bank, San Francisco, CA
  • Drew University, Madison, NJ
  • First City Bank, Houston, TX
  • First National Bank of Minnesota, MN
  • First National City Bank, New York, NY
  • Florida International University Museum, FL
  • General Electric Co., New York, NY
  • London Getty Museum of Art, Malibu, CA
  • Gilman Paper Company, St. Mar's, GA
  • Gulbenkian Foundation, Lisbon, Portugal
  • Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C.
  • Houston Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, TX
  • Illinois State University, Normal, IL
  • Knight Rider Publications, Miami, FL
  • Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York, NY
  • Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA
  • Lowe Art Museum, Miami, FL
  • Manufacturers Hanover Trust, New York
  • Martin Z. Margulies, Grove Island, Coconut Grove, FL
  • Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
  • Museum of Modern Art, Teheran, Iran
  • National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.
  • Newport Harbor Art Museum, CA
  • New York City Public Library, NY
  • Owens Corning, New York, NY
  • Queensborough College, Bayside, NY
  • Rolls Royce, Inc., New York, NY
  • San Francisco Museum of Art, San Francisco, CA
  • Seattle First National Bank, Seattle, WA
  • Seattle Museum of Contemporary Art, Seattle, WA
  • Security Pacific Bank, Los Angeles, CA
  • Stanford University Art Museum, Palo Alto, CA
  • The Swiss Art Foundation, Switzerland
  • University of California at Berkeley Art Museum, CA
  • Worcester Art Museum, Worcester, MA

Further Reading[31] edit

  • "Above and Beyond," New Yorker, Dec. 14, 1992.
  • Antequera, P., Exposición Retrospectiva: Dennis Ashbaugh, El Pintor Del A.D.N." Maragall, Sept. 25, 2007, p. 18.
  • Ashbaugh, Dennis, Paintings from 1974 to 1984, The Main Art Gallery of California State University, Fullerton, ISBN 0-935314-30-X, 1984.
  • Beers, David, "The Gene Screen," Vogue, Jun. 1990, ill p. 237.
  • Blanchard, Joseph, "New York Art," Fuji International, Tokyo, Japan, Oct. 1987, p. 22.
  • Blumberg, Roger B., “Agrippa (A Book of the Dead)” in The Sciences Magazine, September/October 1995, p. 19.
  • Bofferding, R.L. & Barbara Rose, "Dennis Ashbaugh: Paintings from 1974 to 1984."
  • Bofferding, R.L., “Dennis Ashbaugh,” Arts Magazine, April 1982.
  • Boyd, Kerry (1985). 58f Plaza. Sovenga: The University. ISBN 0-935314-30-X.
  • Braff, Phyllis, "Ideas and Form on the Edge," New York Times, May 7, 1989.
  • Brock, Hovey, Artnews, Oct., 1993, p. 167.
  • Brooks, Valerie, "Artists Choose Artists," Arts Extra WBAI-FM, Jun. 24, 1983, Edition #27.
  • Chollet, Lawrence, "Second Sight," Los Angeles Times Magazine, Sept. 12, 1993, pp. 55–8.
  • Chollet, Lawrence, "The Story You Just Can't Forget," Sunday Record, May 17, 1992, pp. 1–8.
  • Cooper, Rhonda, Suffolk Life, Dec. 4, 1985.
  • Cyphers, Peggy, Arts Magazine, Oct., 1989, pp. 105–6.
  • Dawson, Jessica, “Ashbaugh: Art Is In the Genes,” Washington Post, February 17, 2007, p. C2.
  • Egan, Kip, "The Big Picture," Lannan Foundation, Catalogue essay.
  • "Exhibit at the Danforth," Newswest, Volume 1, Number 6.
  • Flam, Jack D., "Artists Choose Artists," Catalogue essay, Jun. 1983, p. 18.
  • Frank, Elizabeth, Art in America, Oct. 1980.
  • Gehr, Richard, "Here Today," Village Voice, Dec. 29, 1992, p. 93.
  • "Genetic Portraits: A Suite of Etchings," Print Collector’s Newsletter, Vol. XXIII, No. 2, May–June 1992, p. 67-68.
  • “Headline Art” in: The New Standard, Londoner’s Diary, June 26, 1981, p. 6.
  • Hopkins, Bud, “Dennis Ashbaugh” in Artforum, January 1976, pp. 59–60.
  • Issues in Science and Technology Magazine. Spring 2006, ISSN 0748-5492, pp. 60–61, 96.
  • IVAM (Institut Valencià d’Art Modern), Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology, IVAM: Valencia, Spain, 2007, ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3
  • Jonas, Gerald, "The Disappearing $2,000 Book," New York Time Book Review, Aug. 29, 1993, p. 12.
  • Lavell, Steve, Ashbaugh at Kasmin, May 1981.
  • Lawson, Carol, New York Times, Apr. 1983.
  • Lieberman, Rhonda, Artforum, Jun. 1992.
  • Lipson, Karin, "Future of Art: Diversity," New York Newsday, Jun. 1989.
  • Markoff, John, "The Influence of Cyberpunk," New York Times, Nov. 25, 1990.
  • Martin, Guy, "Man at his Best," Esquire Japan, Aug. 1992.
  • Martin, Guy, "Read it Once," Esquire, May 1992, p. 33.
  • Matthews, Tom, "Say Goodbye to the Past" in: IVAM (Institut Valencià d’Art Modern), Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology, IVAM: Valencia, Spain, 2007, ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3, pp. 40–71.
  • Murray, Jesse, Arts Magazine, Nov. 1980, p. 14.
  • Pearlman, Jill, “Do You Look Good in Genes? Dennis Ashbaugh: New Paintings” in: Paris Passion, June 1989.
  • Plagens, Peter, "Last Minute Reprieve," Newsweek, Jan. 13, 1992, p. 62-3.
  • Plagens, Peter, “Art in America,” Apr. 1985, Volume 3, Issue 4, p. 144.
  • Princenthal, Nancy, Print Collectors Newsletter, May-Jun. 1992.
  • Quittner, Josh, "Read Any Good Webs Lately?" New York Newsday, Jun. 16, 1992.
  • Rastenberger, Jim, "Book Lark," Vanity Fair, Apr. 1992, p. 124.
  • Ratcliff, Carter, "Abstract Painting: The Idea of Modernity," Catalogue essay, Feb. 1985.
  • Rose, Barbara, "Art and Science Team Up," Art and Auction, ISSN 0197-1093, June 1992, p. 32.
  • Rose, Barbara, "Ashbaugh Sets Stage," Vogue, February 1984, pp. 318–25.
  • Rose, Barbara, "Dennis Ashbaugh," Journal of Art, Jun.-Jul. 1989, p. 15
  • Rose, Barbara, American Painting: The Eighties, Catalogue essay, pp. 10, 12, 18, 104..
  • Rose, Barbara, American Painting: The Twentieth Century, pp. 155–7, ill. p. 175.
  • Rose, Barbara, “The Aesthetics of Biology” in: IVAM (Institut Valencià d’Art Modern), Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology, IVAM: Valencia, Spain, 2007, ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3, pp. 14–29.
  • Russell, John, New York Times, Jun. 10, 1983, p. C6.
  • Scarpa, Mark, Project X issue #23 "Agrippa,: The Transmission," pg. 38.
  • Schejidahl, Peter, "Second Hand Rose," Village Voice, Jan. 1992, p. 86.
  • Smith, Roberta, "Abstraction: A Trend That May Be Coming Back," New York Times, Jan. 10, 1992, p. C28.
  • Spector, Buzz, New Art Examiner, May 1981, p. 18.
  • Swartz, Evan, "A Computer Book You Cannot Put Down," Businessweek, Dec. 21, 1992, p. 86.
  • Talmer, Jerry, "Artist Steals Post Headlines," New York Post, Jan. 16, 1982, p. 13.
  • Talasek, J.D., “Genetics, Visual Culture, Tasteless Tomatoes, and Other Mischief” in: IVAM (Institut Valencià d’Art Modern), Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology, IVAM: Valencia, Spain, 2007, ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3, pp. 30–39.
  • The Week Magazine, “Where to Buy? Dennis Ashbaugh,” October 11, 2002, p. 28.
  • Wei, Lilly, Art in America, Nov. 1993.
  • Wintour, Anna, "Painting the Town," New York Magazine, Aug. 29, 1983, pp. 53, 70-1.

Selected Network Coverage[32] edit

  • "Paradise Now”: Focus, Regional News Network, NY/CT/NJ, September 12, 2000.
  • "Art and Mind": Produced by Mimi Tompkins, Bravo Television, December 2000.
  • "Gene Thoughts": Australia Television, December 2000.
  • "Agrippa," CBS, December 18, 1992.
  • "Agrippa," ZDF Television, Germany, December, 1992.

References edit

  1. ^ "Dennis Ashbaugh - New Yorker Faces Iran Spy Trial". Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  2. ^ "Dennis Ashbaugh". Cultural Programs of the National Academy of Sciences. Retrieved 4 July 2022.
  3. ^ Rose, Barbara (2007). Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology. Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). p. 32. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3.
  4. ^ National Academy of Sciences (2006). Dennis Ashbaugh: Hidden Codes. National Academy of Sciences: Office of Exhibitions and Cultural Programs. p. 4.
  5. ^ "Surf Culture: The Art History of Surfing – Laguna Art Museum". Retrieved 2024-02-13.
  6. ^ "California Revealed: The Dana Point Mafia".
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM) (2007). Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology. Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). p. 171. ISBN 978-8448247393.
  8. ^ Hopkins, Bud (January 1976). "Dennis Ashbaugh". Artforum: 59–60.
  9. ^ "List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1976".
  10. ^ "When Warhol painted the Hammer and Sickle: Did a working trip to Seventies Italy change Andy's political outlook?".
  11. ^ "New Yorker Faces Iran Spy Trial".
  12. ^ Talmer, Jerry (January 16, 1982). "Artist Steals Post Headlines". New York Post. p. 16.
  13. ^ Rose, Barbara (February 1984). "Ashbaugh Sets Stage". Vogue. pp. 318–25.
  14. ^ Rose, Barbara (August 29, 1984). "Painting the Town". New York Magazine. pp. 53, 70–71.
  15. ^ Rose, Barbara (2007). Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology. Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). p. 20. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3.
  16. ^ Kehoe, Brendon P. (August 23, 2008). The Robert Morris Internet Worm. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Computer Science & Artificial Intelligence Laboratory (CSAIL); Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  17. ^ "Erased de Kooning Drawing".
  18. ^ Rose, Barbara (2007). Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology. Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). pp. 14, 18. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3.
  19. ^ Matthews, Tom (2007). Say Goodbye to the Past. Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). pp. 56–58. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3.
  20. ^ Talasek, J.D. (2007). Genetics, Visual Culture, Tasteless Tomatoes, and Other Mischief. Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). p. 32. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3.
  21. ^ Dennis Ashbaugh. Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Science. 1990.
  22. ^ Dennis Ashbaugh: New Paintings. March 25 to April 24, 1993. Marisa del Re Gallery, Exhibition Catalogue. 1993.
  23. ^ Rose, Barbara (2007). Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology. Valenia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). p. 20. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3.
  24. ^ Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology. Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM). 2007. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3.
  25. ^ Dennis Ashbaugh: Hidden Codes, Exhibition at the Rotunda Gallery. Washington, D.C.: National Academy of Sciences, Office of Exhibitions and Cultural Programs. 2006.
  26. ^ "Art in Embassies: U.S. Department of State".
  27. ^ Public Space in the New American City / Atlanta 1996. Installations designed to address the integration of public life and public art in Atlanta, Georgia. Atlanta History Center
  28. ^ "New York State Council on the Arts: 1974-1975" (PDF).
  29. ^ See Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology.Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM), 2007. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3, pp. 171-172, as well as Dennis Ashbaugh: Paintings from 1974 to 1984. Fullerton, CA: California State Univeristy, 1984, pp. 21-22.
  30. ^ See Dennis Ashbaugh: Paintings from 1974 to 1984. Fullerton, CA: California State Univeristy, 1984, p. 21.
  31. ^ A more extensive bibliographic list in chronological order can be found in: Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology. Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM), 2007. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3, pp. 175-176, as well as in Dennis Ashbaugh: Paintings from 1974 to 1984. Fullerton, CA: California State Univeristy, 1984, p. 22.
  32. ^ See Dennis Ashbaugh: The Aesthetics of Biology.Valencia, Spain: Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM), 2007. ISBN 978-84-482-4739-3, p. 176.

External links edit

  • at Wingate Studio
  • Website Website of Dennis Ashbaugh

dennis, ashbaugh, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, biography, living, person, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, adding, rel. This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This biography of a living person needs additional citations for verification Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living persons that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately from the article and its talk page especially if potentially libelous Find sources Dennis Ashbaugh news newspapers books scholar JSTOR June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message A major contributor to this article appears to have a close connection with its subject It may require cleanup to comply with Wikipedia s content policies particularly neutral point of view Please discuss further on the talk page January 2024 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Dennis John Ashbaugh born 1946 in Red Oak Iowa 1 is an American painter and artist who resides in River House in New York City and also lives and works in Millbrook and Pawling New York Dennis AshbaughBorn1946Red Oak IowaNationalityAmericanKnown forAbstract artNotable workAgrippa a book of the dead AwardsGuggenheim Memorial Fellowship Contents 1 Themes and influences 2 Early life 3 Murray Street The Ovals 1970 4 Greene Street The Shineys 1971 1972 5 Whitney Museum Solo Exhibition Russian Agitprop Series 1975 6 Laguna Canyon The Tijuana to Canada Series 1975 1976 7 Greene Street Studio The Nazca Series 1976 1977 8 San Onofre Woofers Series Double and Triple Shadows 1979 1984 9 The Fashion World Exploits 1983 1984 10 Interactive Paintings The Clone Series 1987 11 Computer Viruses 1988 1990 12 DNA Gene Stain Paintings 1989 1990 13 Agrippa A Book of the Dead 1992 14 Degraded DNA Paintings 1995 1996 15 Hiding in Plain Sight 2004 2007 16 Personal life 17 Awards 18 Selected solo exhibitions 29 19 Selected Collections 30 20 Further Reading 31 21 Selected Network Coverage 32 22 References 23 External linksThemes and influences editAs much as possible Ashbaugh has avoided being labeled or categorized by various contemporary isms Minimalism Abstract Expressionism Popism op art or Color Field Painting The constant through line of Ashbaugh s abstract work is a focus on specific current events as seen through the prism of art history such as the future politics computers clones DNA networks and viruses computer and biological though he does not use computers to create these works In 1992 Ashbaugh collaborated with science fiction and cyberpunk novelist William Gibson on the electronic poem Agrippa A Book of the Dead 2 Ashbaugh cites Gibson and fellow cyberpunk novelist Bruce Sterling as key influences as well as Barnett Newman Jackson Pollock and Mark Rothko 3 4 Early life editAshbaugh s grandfathers were a blacksmith and a large landowner and farmer his father an electrical planner and mother a beautician The Ashbaugh family moved to Anaheim California where as a child he intently watched the construction of Disneyland A major influence in Ashbaugh s life was the newly born California surfing scene of the 1950s and 1960s 5 the era of surfing greats Phil Edwards Hobart Hobie Alter Gordon Grubby Clark Carter Pyle and Bruce Brown with whom he surfed In 1961 his parents bought a trailer on the ocean in San Clemente down from where most of the Dana Point Mafia resided 6 The freedom and independence of surfing shaped his worldview both aesthetically and intellectually Throughout his college years Ashbaugh painted with oil or any paint he could get his hands on often working on oversize canvases He received a master s degree in 1969 from California State University Fullerton At the age of 19 he met Frank Stella Barbara Rose Alan Solomon and Leo Castelli Stella offered him the use of his studio in Costa Mesa California and later encouraged Ashbaugh to move to and paint in New York City Murray Street The Ovals 1970 editThrough Stella Rose and others Ashbaugh was introduced to many of the well known working artists performers collectors and gallery owners in New York City many of whom frequented Max s Kansas City such as John Chamberlain Andy Warhol Larry Poons Nancy Graves Carl Andre Brice Marden Robert Rauschenberg Ashbaugh leased a studio on Murray Street in Tribeca He began working on a series entitled The Ovals a reference to Larry Poons Large fiberglass paintings using an elliptical format and drums of polyester resin The unyielding flat surfaces and intentionally ragged edges obliquely allude to the matte encaustic surfaces that Brice Marden and Jasper Johns were using at the time albeit with a California twist These paintings and drawings evolved directly from the artwork last painted in Costa Mesa California and were exhibited at the Orange County Museum of Art formerly the Newport Harbor Art Museum the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego formerly La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art 7 Greene Street The Shineys 1971 1972 editIn 1971 the art dealer Ileana Sonnabend and Henry Geldzahler Director of Contemporary Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art connected Ashbaugh to a space in the center of SoHo Ashbaugh then sold his Murray Street loft to performance artist Laurie Anderson and moved to 67 Greene Street a space capable of accommodating his large paintings Here Ashbaugh began The Shineys a series of fiberglass paintings many as large as 120 by 240 The surfaces were glass like using polyester resin industrial dyes and pigments The Shineys were exhibited in solo exhibitions in Sweden Galleri Ostegren Malmo Sweden and California Jack Glenn Gallery Corona del Mar California and acquired by the Orange County Museum of Art formerly the Newport Harbor Art Museum the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego formerly La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art and the owners of Artforum Magazine 7 Whitney Museum Solo Exhibition Russian Agitprop Series 1975 editDue to the 1973 Oil Crisis the use of 50 gallon drums of polyester resins became untenable as prices soared beyond Ashbaugh s means For inspiration Ashbaugh turned to the Russian Revolution of 1917 the beginning of abstract non objective painting with Malevich Tatlin and Lissitzky who themselves were abandoned by the state Ashbaugh s paintings were extremely large approximately 120 x 240 inches and came away six inches from the wall The hues were limited to primary colors with an unsettling inclusion of a tertiary palette They were made with oil and beeswax using an encaustic process and titled in Russian In 1975 the entire series curated by Marcia Tucker became a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum 8 as well as in Belgium Galerie Alexandria Monett Brussels and France Galerie Farideh Cadot Paris 7 Laguna Canyon The Tijuana to Canada Series 1975 1976 editAshbaugh decided to make work in the warmer months in Laguna Beach California where he leased an unfinished indoor outdoor building with 50 foot ceilings without doors or windows He lived in a scaffolding to avoid scorpions and rattlesnakes While moving studio equipment from New York to the Canyon Studio Ashbaugh heard loud noises and sonic booms Flying at Mach speed stealth bombers from Camp Pendleton and El Toro Marine Base were practice flying up and down the canyon corridor Their twisting foreshortened configurations were reminiscent to Ashbaugh of the Suprematism work of Malevich and Lissitzky Further the planes were constructed with a precursor to Vantablack which disguises all contours Ashbaugh created large unwieldy shaped canvases with the flattest matte paint then available The paintings were titled for the test flight corridor being used from Tijuana to Canada Ashbaugh was awarded the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship in 1976 9 Greene Street Studio The Nazca Series 1976 1977 editIn 1976 Thomas M Messer Director of the Guggenheim Museum of Art in New York recruited Ashbaugh to help organize and install Alfred Jensen s exhibition for the Sao Paulo Art Biennial representing the United States While completing the installation Ashbaugh became aware of the earthworks that were championed by Virginia Dwan Michael Heizer Robert Smithson and Walter De Maria and that were being created in the Nevada desert Ashbaugh traveled to Peru flew over the Nazca Lines and contacted Maria Reiche the German scholar and mathematician who had been studying cataloging and protecting the drawings in Nazca since 1946 When Ashbaugh returned to New York City he began construction of the heavily contorted and large 10 x20 shaped Nazca canvas paintings Ashbaugh thought of them as anthropomorphized planar geometry or as alien landing strips and imagined them placed on a wall vertically not flat on the ground as in the earthworks in Nazca and Nevada Founder Alanna Heiss at PS1 Project Room in Brooklyn now the Museum of Modern Art curated the construction and installation of the work influenced by the Peru trip 7 San Onofre Woofers Series Double and Triple Shadows 1979 1984 editAt the Dia Art Foundation Ashbaugh saw from Andy Warhol s Hammer and Sickle work 10 that two shapes even three distinct shapes would cast only one combined shadow He began a series paintings with multiple images but only one combined shadow These works are loosely painted in fluorescents with swaths of glow in the dark pigments Seen with the lights off they eerily resemble the frenetic brushwork of Willem de Kooning or Franz Kline Ashbaugh became fascinated by the new technology of paint chemistry and also applied flocking to the surfaces Since 1974 Ashbaugh has focused on First Amendment rights with concern for the degradation of journalistic news into a propaganda tool or a pop culture sales hook In 1979 The Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City acquired a 108 x108 inch painting from the series titled New Yorker Faces Iran Spy Trial 11 The title came from a headline of the sensationalist tabloid the New York Post as was each painting in the entire Woofer Series 12 Ashbaugh s San Onofre Series 1980 had solo exhibitions at Knoedler Kasmin Gallery in London the Richard Gray Gallery in Chicago the Janie C Lee Gallery Houston as well as acquisitions by the Hirshhorn Museum of Art in Washington D C and at Stanford University the Orange County Museum of Art and the Houston Museum of Fine Arts These paintings were exhibited globally traveling to England Portugal Australia and South Africa Natalie Knight Gallery Johannesburg South Africa the Gulbenkian Foundation Lisbon Portugal and the Swiss Art Foundation Switzerland 7 The Fashion World Exploits 1983 1984 editIn 1983 Anna Wintour the newly appointed editor of New York Magazine asked a group of artists including Dennis Ashbaugh Jean Michel Basquiat David Salle for permission to include their work in a fashion shoot for publication The issue was called The Art Beat Wintour was taken by way that Ashbaugh had incorporated the models into the staged artwork and made the decision to use this image as the magazine s centerfold When told of the image s placement Ashbaugh requested that the centerfold become a scratch and sniff that smelled of the models perfume a tribute to old porn magazines a proposal that was of course rejected The popular issue elevated Ms Wintour to the position of editor in chief of Vogue Ms Wintour and Alexander Liberman commissioned Ashbaugh to do an eight page spread for Conde Nast using his brightly colored images 13 14 Interactive Paintings The Clone Series 1987 editWith the many advancements in DNA and computer technologies Ashbaugh believed there must be a viable path forward for abstract painting As Barbara Rose stated Like Pollock Ashbaugh is keenly aware that innovations in technology require a thoughtful response from artists who are awake to their own time 15 He began working on the large scale colorful Clone Series conceptually based on the idea that entirety of art history could be placed on a single floppy disk These paintings were shown in a retrospective at IVAM in Valencia Spain 2007 7 Computer Viruses 1988 1990 editIn 1988 the first computer virus was created by Robert Tappan Morris a Cornell University student 16 Ashbaugh recognized it as a major technological and cultural event where computer information could be created then co opted and deleted He perceived this as a paradigm shift that information would never again be the same Reminded of Robert Rauschenberg s erasure of the Willem de Kooning drawing 17 Ashbaugh embarked on painting a series of large black and fluorescent works using the visual images located in the aftermath of a virus attack or in his words a new beginning 18 The works were painted with glossy industrial floor enamel and epoxy appearing as blank television screens with color charts inserted on either the upper or lower framing edge Solo exhibitions followed at the Marisa del Re Gallery Paul Kasmin Gallery and IVAM Valencia Spain 7 DNA Gene Stain Paintings 1989 1990 editThe Human Genome Project launched in 1990 by James Watson and Craig Venter gave Ashbaugh the idea of the Gene Stain Paintings He used washes of color alluding to Morris Louis s stain paintings and subtle markings on large scale canvases When art history scholar and critic Robert Rosenblum first saw this work in the 1990 he remarked Why would anyone want to make stain paintings now 19 Ashbaugh reminded the critic that as early as 1946 Barnett Newman had painted a work titled The Genetic Moment 20 Ashbaugh executed these paintings at various makeshift outdoor studios due to the extreme toxicity of the paints used The Gene Stain Paintings were exhibited at the National Academy of Sciences 21 the Marisa del Re Gallery 22 the Paul Kasmin Gallery and IVAM Print editions were acquired by Microsoft Corporation Lincoln Center and State Department Art Collections in Embassies 7 Agrippa A Book of the Dead 1992 editA collaborative book by the founder of cyberpunk William Gibson and Dennis Ashbaugh was published in 1992 in two limited editions Deluxe and Small and entitled Agrippa A Book of the Dead The book included copperplate aquatint etchings Ashbaugh and a poem Gibson See separate Wikipedia entry Agrippa A Book of the Dead Degraded DNA Paintings 1995 1996 editIn the early 1990s there was much discussion in the forensic and scientific communities as well as in the culture at large as to what fraction of DNA was required to make an accurate analysis of ancestry race and origin Working outdoors Ashbaugh became aware of rust as well as the elements of sun acid rain and snow to cause entropic decay He used Corten steel dust and fugitive fluorescent pigments which degrade with ultraviolet rays on large canvases and placed them outside for a year The components turned into a rich rusted patina on 108 x108 canvases They resembled used paintings and made allusions to the paintings of Anselm Kieffer and Julian Schnabel and were exhibited at Marisa del Re Gallery and IVAM 7 Hiding in Plain Sight 2004 2007 editThe issues of privacy and identity became a deep concern for Ashbaugh In 2006 the company 23andMe began selling DNA kits for purposes of genealogical inquiry individual heritage studies for home use accumulating vast quantities of data Later at the Whitehead Institute in Cambridge Massachusetts Ashbaugh met Yaniv Erlich an Israeli scientist whose laboratory had just determined that no genetic information is private and can be accessed by anyone Ashbaugh had been painting large DNA works with saturated colors like the washes of his earlier series Each of the brightly colored paintings of a typical human genetic sequence were now covered with camouflage so that any adequate reading of the sequence could not be accurately determined 23 This series was shown at IVAM in Valencia Spain as a part of the major 2007 Ashbaugh retrospective organized by critic Barbara Rose 24 and at the National Academy of Sciences 7 25 Personal life editHe is the longtime companion of author Alexandra Penney He has been characterized by the New York Times as a charismatic ex surfer whose address book can probably hold its own against that of the most aggressive jet set type 26 Awards editFirst Place United States Olympic Architecture Design Competition 1996 27 John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship 1976 C A P S New York State Council on the Arts 1975 28 Selected solo exhibitions 29 editInstitut Valencia d Art Modern IVAM a retrospective of works Valencia Spain 2007 National Academy of Sciences Washington DC 2006 Margulies Taplan Gallery Miami FL 1994 Marisa del Re Gallery New York NY 1993 Goode Crowley Editions Houston TX 1993 The Americas Society New York NY 1992 The Metropolitan Museum of Art Mezzanine Gallery New York NY 1992 The Kitchen New York NY 1992 Margulies Taplan Gallery Miami FL 1990 Paul Kasmin Gallery New York NY 1990 Paul Kasmin Gallery New York NY 1989 Charles Cowles Gallery New York NY 1982 Richard Gray Gallery Chicago IL 1982 Charles Cowles Gallery New York NY 1982 Kasmin Knoedler Gallery London England 1981 Charles Cowles Gallery New York NY 1980 Janie C Lee Gallery Houston TX 1980 Galerie Farideh Cadot Paris France 1979 PS I Long Island City Project Rooms NY 1977 Seattle Art Museum Seattle WA 1976 Whitney Museum of American Art New York NY 1975 Galleri Ostergren Malmo Sweden 1972 Newport Harbor Art Museum Newport Beach CA 1971 Gallery Farideh Cadot Paris France 1970 La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art La Jolla CA 1970 Selected Collections 30 editBoca Raton Museum of Art FL Brooklyn Museum NY Crocker National Bank San Francisco CA Drew University Madison NJ First City Bank Houston TX First National Bank of Minnesota MN First National City Bank New York NY Florida International University Museum FL General Electric Co New York NY London Getty Museum of Art Malibu CA Gilman Paper Company St Mar s GA Gulbenkian Foundation Lisbon Portugal Hirschhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden Washington D C Houston Museum of Fine Arts Houston TX Illinois State University Normal IL Knight Rider Publications Miami FL Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts New York NY Los Angeles County Museum of Art CA Lowe Art Museum Miami FL Manufacturers Hanover Trust New York Martin Z Margulies Grove Island Coconut Grove FL Metropolitan Museum of Art New York Museum of Modern Art Teheran Iran National Gallery of Art Washington D C Newport Harbor Art Museum CA New York City Public Library NY Owens Corning New York NY Queensborough College Bayside NY Rolls Royce Inc New York NY San Francisco Museum of Art San Francisco CA Seattle First National Bank Seattle WA Seattle Museum of Contemporary Art Seattle WA Security Pacific Bank Los Angeles CA Stanford University Art Museum Palo Alto CA The Swiss Art Foundation Switzerland University of California at Berkeley Art Museum CA Worcester Art Museum Worcester MAFurther Reading 31 edit Above and Beyond New Yorker Dec 14 1992 Antequera P Exposicion Retrospectiva Dennis Ashbaugh El Pintor Del A D N Maragall Sept 25 2007 p 18 Ashbaugh Dennis Paintings from 1974 to 1984 The Main Art Gallery of California State University Fullerton ISBN 0 935314 30 X 1984 Beers David The Gene Screen Vogue Jun 1990 ill p 237 Blanchard Joseph New York Art Fuji International Tokyo Japan Oct 1987 p 22 Blumberg Roger B Agrippa A Book of the Dead in The Sciences Magazine September October 1995 p 19 Bofferding R L amp Barbara Rose Dennis Ashbaugh Paintings from 1974 to 1984 Bofferding R L Dennis Ashbaugh Arts Magazine April 1982 Boyd Kerry 1985 58f Plaza Sovenga The University ISBN 0 935314 30 X Braff Phyllis Ideas and Form on the Edge New York Times May 7 1989 Brock Hovey Artnews Oct 1993 p 167 Brooks Valerie Artists Choose Artists Arts Extra WBAI FM Jun 24 1983 Edition 27 Chollet Lawrence Second Sight Los Angeles Times Magazine Sept 12 1993 pp 55 8 Chollet Lawrence The Story You Just Can t Forget Sunday Record May 17 1992 pp 1 8 Cooper Rhonda Suffolk Life Dec 4 1985 Cyphers Peggy Arts Magazine Oct 1989 pp 105 6 Dawson Jessica Ashbaugh Art Is In the Genes Washington Post February 17 2007 p C2 Egan Kip The Big Picture Lannan Foundation Catalogue essay Exhibit at the Danforth Newswest Volume 1 Number 6 Flam Jack D Artists Choose Artists Catalogue essay Jun 1983 p 18 Frank Elizabeth Art in America Oct 1980 Gehr Richard Here Today Village Voice Dec 29 1992 p 93 Genetic Portraits A Suite of Etchings Print Collector s Newsletter Vol XXIII No 2 May June 1992 p 67 68 Headline Art in The New Standard Londoner s Diary June 26 1981 p 6 Hopkins Bud Dennis Ashbaugh in Artforum January 1976 pp 59 60 Issues in Science and Technology Magazine Spring 2006 ISSN 0748 5492 pp 60 61 96 IVAM Institut Valencia d Art Modern Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology IVAM Valencia Spain 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 Jonas Gerald The Disappearing 2 000 Book New York Time Book Review Aug 29 1993 p 12 Lavell Steve Ashbaugh at Kasmin May 1981 Lawson Carol New York Times Apr 1983 Lieberman Rhonda Artforum Jun 1992 Lipson Karin Future of Art Diversity New York Newsday Jun 1989 Markoff John The Influence of Cyberpunk New York Times Nov 25 1990 Martin Guy Man at his Best Esquire Japan Aug 1992 Martin Guy Read it Once Esquire May 1992 p 33 Matthews Tom Say Goodbye to the Past in IVAM Institut Valencia d Art Modern Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology IVAM Valencia Spain 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 pp 40 71 Murray Jesse Arts Magazine Nov 1980 p 14 Pearlman Jill Do You Look Good in Genes Dennis Ashbaugh New Paintings in Paris Passion June 1989 Plagens Peter Last Minute Reprieve Newsweek Jan 13 1992 p 62 3 Plagens Peter Art in America Apr 1985 Volume 3 Issue 4 p 144 Princenthal Nancy Print Collectors Newsletter May Jun 1992 Quittner Josh Read Any Good Webs Lately New York Newsday Jun 16 1992 Rastenberger Jim Book Lark Vanity Fair Apr 1992 p 124 Ratcliff Carter Abstract Painting The Idea of Modernity Catalogue essay Feb 1985 Rose Barbara Art and Science Team Up Art and Auction ISSN 0197 1093 June 1992 p 32 Rose Barbara Ashbaugh Sets Stage Vogue February 1984 pp 318 25 Rose Barbara Dennis Ashbaugh Journal of Art Jun Jul 1989 p 15 Rose Barbara American Painting The Eighties Catalogue essay pp 10 12 18 104 Rose Barbara American Painting The Twentieth Century pp 155 7 ill p 175 Rose Barbara The Aesthetics of Biology in IVAM Institut Valencia d Art Modern Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology IVAM Valencia Spain 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 pp 14 29 Russell John New York Times Jun 10 1983 p C6 Scarpa Mark Project X issue 23 Agrippa The Transmission pg 38 Schejidahl Peter Second Hand Rose Village Voice Jan 1992 p 86 Smith Roberta Abstraction A Trend That May Be Coming Back New York Times Jan 10 1992 p C28 Spector Buzz New Art Examiner May 1981 p 18 Swartz Evan A Computer Book You Cannot Put Down Businessweek Dec 21 1992 p 86 Talmer Jerry Artist Steals Post Headlines New York Post Jan 16 1982 p 13 Talasek J D Genetics Visual Culture Tasteless Tomatoes and Other Mischief in IVAM Institut Valencia d Art Modern Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology IVAM Valencia Spain 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 pp 30 39 The Week Magazine Where to Buy Dennis Ashbaugh October 11 2002 p 28 Wei Lilly Art in America Nov 1993 Wintour Anna Painting the Town New York Magazine Aug 29 1983 pp 53 70 1 Selected Network Coverage 32 edit Paradise Now Focus Regional News Network NY CT NJ September 12 2000 Art and Mind Produced by Mimi Tompkins Bravo Television December 2000 Gene Thoughts Australia Television December 2000 Agrippa CBS December 18 1992 Agrippa ZDF Television Germany December 1992 References edit Dennis Ashbaugh New Yorker Faces Iran Spy Trial Metropolitan Museum of Art Retrieved 4 July 2022 Dennis Ashbaugh Cultural Programs of the National Academy of Sciences Retrieved 4 July 2022 Rose Barbara 2007 Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM p 32 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 National Academy of Sciences 2006 Dennis Ashbaugh Hidden Codes National Academy of Sciences Office of Exhibitions and Cultural Programs p 4 Surf Culture The Art History of Surfing Laguna Art Museum Retrieved 2024 02 13 California Revealed The Dana Point Mafia a b c d e f g h i j Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM 2007 Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM p 171 ISBN 978 8448247393 Hopkins Bud January 1976 Dennis Ashbaugh Artforum 59 60 List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 1976 When Warhol painted the Hammer and Sickle Did a working trip to Seventies Italy change Andy s political outlook New Yorker Faces Iran Spy Trial Talmer Jerry January 16 1982 Artist Steals Post Headlines New York Post p 16 Rose Barbara February 1984 Ashbaugh Sets Stage Vogue pp 318 25 Rose Barbara August 29 1984 Painting the Town New York Magazine pp 53 70 71 Rose Barbara 2007 Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM p 20 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 Kehoe Brendon P August 23 2008 The Robert Morris Internet Worm Cambridge Massachusetts Computer Science amp Artificial Intelligence Laboratory CSAIL Massachusetts Institute of Technology Erased de Kooning Drawing Rose Barbara 2007 Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM pp 14 18 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 Matthews Tom 2007 Say Goodbye to the Past Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM pp 56 58 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 Talasek J D 2007 Genetics Visual Culture Tasteless Tomatoes and Other Mischief Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM p 32 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 Dennis Ashbaugh Washington D C National Academy of Science 1990 Dennis Ashbaugh New Paintings March 25 to April 24 1993 Marisa del Re Gallery Exhibition Catalogue 1993 Rose Barbara 2007 Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Valenia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM p 20 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 Dennis Ashbaugh Hidden Codes Exhibition at the Rotunda Gallery Washington D C National Academy of Sciences Office of Exhibitions and Cultural Programs 2006 Art in Embassies U S Department of State Public Space in the New American City Atlanta 1996 Installations designed to address the integration of public life and public art in Atlanta Georgia Atlanta History Center New York State Council on the Arts 1974 1975 PDF See Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 pp 171 172 as well as Dennis Ashbaugh Paintings from 1974 to 1984 Fullerton CA California State Univeristy 1984 pp 21 22 See Dennis Ashbaugh Paintings from 1974 to 1984 Fullerton CA California State Univeristy 1984 p 21 A more extensive bibliographic list in chronological order can be found in Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 pp 175 176 as well as in Dennis Ashbaugh Paintings from 1974 to 1984 Fullerton CA California State Univeristy 1984 p 22 See Dennis Ashbaugh The Aesthetics of Biology Valencia Spain Institut Valencia D Art Modern IVAM 2007 ISBN 978 84 482 4739 3 p 176 External links editDennis Ashbaugh at Wingate Studio Website Website of Dennis Ashbaugh Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dennis Ashbaugh amp oldid 1217631906, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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