fbpx
Wikipedia

Dike Blair

Dike Blair (born 1952) is a New York-based artist, writer and teacher.[1][2] His art consists of two parallel bodies of work: intimate, photorealistic paintings and installation-like sculptures assembled from common objects—often exhibited together—which examine overlooked and unexceptional phenomena of daily existence in both a romantic and ironic manner.[3][4][5] Blair emerged out of the late 1970s New York art scene, and his work relates to concurrent movements such as the Pictures Generation, Minimalism and conceptual art, while remaining distinct from and tangential to them.[6][1][7] New York Times critic Roberta Smith places his sculpture in a "blurred category" crossing "Carl Andre with ikebana, formalist abstraction with sleek anonymous hotel rooms, talk-show sets with home furnishings showrooms."[6] Cameron Martin writes in Artforum that the paintings are "rendered with a lucidity that extracts something metaphysical from the mundane."[8]

Dike Blair
Born1952
NationalityAmerican
EducationSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago, University of Colorado Boulder, Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture
Known forPainting, sculpture, installation
StyleRealist, abstract, conceptual
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship, American Academy in Rome
WebsiteDike Blair

Early career edit

Blair was born in 1952 in New Castle, Pennsylvania.[9][10] He studied art at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, Whitney Museum independent study program, and University of Colorado, Boulder, and earned an MFA from School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1977.[10][2][11] He was part of the late 1970s New York art scene, performing at CBGB (1976) and frequenting art bars like Magoo’s, The Mudd Club and Barnabus Rex.[11] His early artwork consisted of abstract, formalist wall works made of acrylics and enamels poured and sprayed onto paper, Masonite and glass.[12][13][10]

In the early 1980s, he began—somewhat ironically—painting small, illusionistic gouaches of sailboats, initially from observation or memory, akin to Sunday painting.[10] He eventually integrated them into wall constructions, shown at Baskerville + Watson (1986) and Cash/Newhouse (1987).[14][15] This work evolved into more widely known installations, such as his 1991 show at Ealan Wingate, based around photographs he took at Disney's Epcot. The show featured mixed-media images installed in a darkened room scored to Muzak, and decorated and carpeted in mauve with plants and suburban benches; reviews described it, alternately, as suffused with loss and nostalgia, soothing, and surprisingly spiritual.[16][9][17]

 
Dike Blair, Untitled, Gouache, pastel and pencil on paper, 12" x 9", 2016.

Blair's work has been shown at the Whitney Museum, Secession (Vienna), Weatherspoon Art Museum, Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, and Centre Pompidou;[18][8][19][20] it belongs to the collections of the Whitney, Brooklyn Museum, and Los Angeles County Museum of Art, among others.[21][22] He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2009 and the Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome in 2010.[23][24] He lives in New York with his wife, costume designer Marie Abma.[10][24]

Work and critical reception edit

Blair's two bodies of work serve as counterpoints and foils for one another in regard to composition, color, texture and theme.[6][25] His realistic, deadpan paintings (primarily untitled, painted in gouache, and derived from his own snapshots) are more literal, yet illusionistic; the Postminimal, installation-like sculpture is abstract, but concrete and painterly.[25][10] Together they investigate oppositions and liminal spaces—between nature and architecture, inside and outside, fullness and emptiness—and themes including pleasure and boredom, escapism and transcendence, and the intersection of designed environments, mass experience and desire.[26][3][27]

 
Dike Blair, to want to, Painted wood, carpet, rubber mat, fluorescent fixtures, vinyl, Duratrans, 22" (h) x 150" (w) x 92" (d), 2005.

Blair's earlier gouaches focus on diaristic, largely American scenes (bedside set-ups, cocktails, cigarette butt-littered ashtrays, soda cans, VHS tapes) and anodyne transitory environments (motels, lounges, lobbies, Las Vegas, Disneyland) that Roberta Smith characterizes as background and details at "the edges of a sophisticated, travel-weary terrain."[6][9][28] Village Voice critic Jerry Saltz writes that the paintings combine "a draftsman's attention to fact, a botanist's eye for type, and a detective's feel for telling clues," resulting in a no-man's-land genre "between illustration, photography, and forensic science."[28] He likens the paintings to work by Richard Prince and Vija Celmins, while others make comparisons to the light and illusionism of Vermeer and the solitude of Edward Hopper.[28][29][18][3] In later paintings, Blair turned to landscape, close-cropped flower images, views through obscured windows, and in the 2000s, to close-ups of eyes and nocturnal parking lots and snow scenes.[30][25][29] Christopher Knight describes these later works largely devoid of people as "brimming over with unconquerable wanderlust."[7]

In the mid-1990s, Blair began producing décor-like works inspired by contemporary corporate and domestic design and guided by Japanese flower arrangement rules.[31][32][25] They compress installation-work elements of light, material, color and image into discrete, hybrid sculptures that evoke interiors, furniture, drawing, architecture, landscapes and the human body.[33][11][30] Blair carefully manipulates elements such as electrical cords unfurling like lines across color-fields of industrial carpet, Plexiglas and plywood, lightboxes, shipping crates and lamps, seeking a balance in which objects retain their specificity yet read together as singular works.[34][32][30] Paralleling his gouaches, the earlier sculptures examine themes involving atmosphere, designed space and consumer culture, while his post-2006 works take up phenomenological issues relating to the body, such as ocular versus corporeal experience of images, objects and space.[1][27][8][5]

Later exhibitions edit

Blair's exhibitions at Feature (2001, 2004) and Mary Goldman (2005) inclined toward increasingly spare, refined presentation.[33][27][32] They paired gouache paintings of lyrical water-streaked windows and flowers with electrical cord and geometric carpet lengths, glowing boxes and low-slung Minimalist objects, creating spaces that reviews describe as calming, mysterious and melancholic domestic tableaux (e.g. Some Of and And When, 2001; to want to, 2005).[34][1][32] The Brooklyn Rail compared the effect of these exhibitions to the ambient music of artists such as Brian Eno, "tastefully calibrating" momentary experience, while remaining ambivalent about the consequences for subjectivity of living in a thoroughly designed world.[27]

 
Dike Blair, Untitled, Oil on aluminum panel, 24" x 18", 2018.

In the later 2000s, Blair placed greater emphasis on perceptual issues, introducing close-up paintings of women's eyes and painted shipping crates that simultaneously evoke functional objects, picture planes, space dividers, walls and figures.[30][8][35] For the survey, "Dike Blair: Now and Again" (Weatherspoon Art Museum, 2009), he produced a subtly staged and lit experience involving two sculpture courts—mirror layouts to one another invoking the space in its entirety—that flanked a series of galleries housing his gouaches; Artforum described the show as an intimate and uncanny meditation on experiencing versus seeing, real versus illusionistic space.[8] In exhibitions at Gagosian (2010], Feature (2013), Linn Lühn (2014) and Jürgen Becker Gallery (2017), Blair continued to expand the range of allusions and effects, painting crate-sculpture sides like pebbled-glass windows (Those and These, 2010), benday-dot print patterns sometimes suggesting peepholes (Dance, Dance, Dance, 2011), and minimal intimations of skies and landscapes (OHCE, 2014), which he adorned with paintings of eyes, interiors and other subjects.[36][5][29][37]

In 2017, Blair suspended his work on sculpture and took up oil painting.[38][39] The subjects of those paintings are consistent which his gouaches—sometimes the same image—but the oils have a different physicality, including very slight impasto and intaglio. Around the same time, he began producing drawings, something that had not previously been part of his practice.[40][38]

Other professional activities edit

Blair's professional activities include writing and teaching. He has contributed articles and reviews to Artforum,[41] ARTnews,[42] Art Press,[43] Bomb,[44] Harpers,[45] and Parkett,[46] and served as contributing and associate editor for the Parisian magazine Purple, writing about design, music, technology, film, art and architecture.[47][48][25] He has also written the books Again: Selected Interviews and Essays (2007) and Punk (1978, with Isabelle Anscomber).[49][50] Blair taught in the painting department at Rhode Island School of Design from 1997 to 2017, as well as at Art Institute of Boston, New York University, and University of Las Vegas.[10][51]

Awards and public collections edit

Blair has received a John S. Guggenheim Fellowship (2009), the American Academy in Rome Prize (2010), and fellowships from the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation (1995) and Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation/National Endowment for the Arts (1988).[23][24][52] His work belongs to the public collections of the Whitney Museum,[21] Brooklyn Museum,[22] Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Dallas Museum of Art,[53] Musee Des Beaux Arts La Chaux De Fonds (Switzerland), MUMOK (Vienna),[54] Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles,[55] Portland Art Museum,[56] and Weatherspoon Art Museum, among others.[57]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d Princenthal, Nancy. "Dike Blair," Art in America, May 2002, p. 148–9.
  2. ^ a b Rian, Jeff. "Dike Blair, New York, New York," Apartamento, 2011, p. 194–207.
  3. ^ a b c Richard, Frances. "Dike Blair," Artforum, March 2007, p. 315. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  4. ^ Schjeldahl, Peter. "Dike Blair," The New Yorker, December 2018. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c Wilk, Deborah. "Dike Blair," Modern Painters, September 2013, p. 110.
  6. ^ a b c d Smith, Roberta. "Dike Blair," The New York Times, November 2, 2001, p. E40. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  7. ^ a b Knight, Christopher. "Portraits of Transience," Los Angeles Times, May 18, 2001, p. F16. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  8. ^ a b c d e Martin, Cameron. "Dike Blair," Artforum, May 2010, p. 242–3. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  9. ^ a b c Rian, Jeff. "Ouverture, Dike Blair," Flash Art, November/December 1997, p. 104.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Stillman, Steele. "In the Studio: Dike Blair," Art in America, September 2009. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  11. ^ a b c Prince, Richard. "Window On Their World: Dike Blair Interviewed by Richard Prince," ArtReview, 2005, p. 78–81.
  12. ^ Cohen, Ronny H. "Energism: An Attitude," Artforum, September 1980, p. p. 17–23. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  13. ^ Cohen, Ronny H. "Dike Blair," Artforum, January 1982, p. 78–80. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  14. ^ Sturtevant, Alfred. "Dike Blair," Arts, April 1986.
  15. ^ Heller, Sally. "Dike Blair," 108 An East Village Review, January 1987, p. 2.
  16. ^ Hagen, Charles. "Dike Blair," The New York Times, October 25, 1991, p. C5. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  17. ^ The New Yorker. "Goings On About Town: Photography," October 28, 1991. p. 84.
  18. ^ a b Griffin, Tim. "Tim Griffin talks with the curators of the 2004 Whitney Biennial," Artforum, January 2004, p. 57–9. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  19. ^ Abramovich, Alex. "Termite Art and the Modern Museum," The New Yorker, February 28, 2019.
  20. ^ Leguillon, Pierre. "Purple Horizon," Beaux Arts, July 2000, p. 40.
  21. ^ a b Whitney Museum of American Art. "Dike Blair," Artists. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  22. ^ a b Brooklyn Museum. Lotus and Robot, Dike Blair, Collection. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  23. ^ a b Artforum. "Guggenheim Fellows Announced," News, April 10, 2009. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  24. ^ a b c American Academy in Rome. "The “Glimpse” Series: Dike Blair Contemplates Japan While in Rome," News. March 1, 2011. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  25. ^ a b c d e Carlson, Ben. "Working Practice: Dike Blair." Modern Painters, June 2007, p. 128.
  26. ^ Griffin, Tim. "The Intangible Economy: Ricci Albenda, Stephen Hendee, Dike Blair," Artext, 70, August–October 2000, p. 66–71.
  27. ^ a b c d White, Roger. "Dike Blair," The Brooklyn Rail, May 2004, p. 14. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  28. ^ a b c Saltz, Jerry. "Pulp Friction," The Village Voice, January 17–23, 2007.
  29. ^ a b c Smolik, Noemi. "Dike Blair," Artforum, April 2017. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  30. ^ a b c d Knight, Christopher. "Dike Blair at Mary Goldman Gallery," Los Angeles Times, May 16, 2008. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  31. ^ Harrison, Helen. "Stepping Beyond the Traditional in Still Lifes," The New York Times, October 10, 1999, p. LI14. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  32. ^ a b c d Balaschak, Chris. "Dike Blair," Frieze, November/December 2005, p. 141. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  33. ^ a b Dailey, Meghan. "Dike Blair," Artforum, January 2002, p. 141. Retrieved November 18, 2020.
  34. ^ a b Williams, Gregory. "Critics' Picks: Dike Blair," Artforum, November 2001. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  35. ^ Gibson, David. "Dike Blair," Frieze, September 2013, p. 172–3. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  36. ^ Fry, Naomi. "Dike Blair," Frieze, November–December 2010. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  37. ^ Linn Lühn. Dike Blair. Exhibitions. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
  38. ^ a b Rian, Jeff. "Dike Blair," Purple, Issue #33, 2020. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  39. ^ The Modern Institute. Dike Blair. Retrieved December 5, 2020.
  40. ^ Blair, Dike. Dike Blair: Drawings, New York: Karma, 2019. Retrieved December 1, 2020.
  41. ^ Artforum. Dike Blair, Contributor. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  42. ^ Blair, Dike. "Michael Goldberg," ARTnews, March 1991, p. 142–3.
  43. ^ Blair, Dike. "Flip-Flopping Fictions and the Interface of Some Spaces," Art Press, #21, 2000, p. 144–8.
  44. ^ Blair, Dike. "Cameron Martin," Bomb, Fall 2007, p. 14. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  45. ^ Blair, Dike and Michael Drake. "Typing test," Harper's, March 2000, p. 32–5. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  46. ^ Blair, Dike. "A Reflection or Two (on Richard Prince)," Parkett, #72, 2004, p. 96–107.
  47. ^ Blair, Dike. "Dan Colen," Purple, Spring/Summer 2008, p. 352–3. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  48. ^ Blair, Dike. "Anti-Column," Purple, Fall/Winter 2014, p. 352–3. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  49. ^ Blair, Dike. Again : Selected Interviews and Essays, Chicago: Whitewalls, 2007. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  50. ^ Blair, Dike and Isabelle Anscomber. Punk, New York: Urizen Books, Inc., 1978. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  51. ^ John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Dike Blair, Fellows. Retrieved November 17, 2020.
  52. ^ Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation. "1995," Previous Winners. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  53. ^ Armstrong, Annie. "Dallas Art Museum Adds Eight Works to Collection with Dallas Art Fair Acquisition Fund," ARTnews, April 11, 2019. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  54. ^ MUMOK (Museum of Modern Art Stiftung Ludwig Wien). Dike Blair, Shine, Collection. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  55. ^ Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles. Dike Blair, Collection. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  56. ^ Portland Art Museum. Untitled (three panels), Dike Blair, Collections. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  57. ^ Weatherspoon Art Museum. Dike Blair, Artist. Retrieved November 20, 2020.

External links edit

  • Dike Blair official website
  • Dike Blair Guggenheim Fellowship page
  • Dike Blair artist page, Karma
  • Dike Blair artist page, Gagosian
  • Dike Blair artist page, Jürgen Becker Gallery
  • "DIKE BLAIR WITH STEEL STILLMAN", Art in America 9/18/09

dike, blair, born, 1952, york, based, artist, writer, teacher, consists, parallel, bodies, work, intimate, photorealistic, paintings, installation, like, sculptures, assembled, from, common, objects, often, exhibited, together, which, examine, overlooked, unex. Dike Blair born 1952 is a New York based artist writer and teacher 1 2 His art consists of two parallel bodies of work intimate photorealistic paintings and installation like sculptures assembled from common objects often exhibited together which examine overlooked and unexceptional phenomena of daily existence in both a romantic and ironic manner 3 4 5 Blair emerged out of the late 1970s New York art scene and his work relates to concurrent movements such as the Pictures Generation Minimalism and conceptual art while remaining distinct from and tangential to them 6 1 7 New York Times critic Roberta Smith places his sculpture in a blurred category crossing Carl Andre with ikebana formalist abstraction with sleek anonymous hotel rooms talk show sets with home furnishings showrooms 6 Cameron Martin writes in Artforum that the paintings are rendered with a lucidity that extracts something metaphysical from the mundane 8 Dike BlairBorn1952New Castle Pennsylvania United StatesNationalityAmericanEducationSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago University of Colorado Boulder Skowhegan School of Painting and SculptureKnown forPainting sculpture installationStyleRealist abstract conceptualAwardsGuggenheim Fellowship American Academy in RomeWebsiteDike Blair Contents 1 Early career 2 Work and critical reception 2 1 Later exhibitions 3 Other professional activities 4 Awards and public collections 5 References 6 External linksEarly career editBlair was born in 1952 in New Castle Pennsylvania 9 10 He studied art at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture Whitney Museum independent study program and University of Colorado Boulder and earned an MFA from School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1977 10 2 11 He was part of the late 1970s New York art scene performing at CBGB 1976 and frequenting art bars like Magoo s The Mudd Club and Barnabus Rex 11 His early artwork consisted of abstract formalist wall works made of acrylics and enamels poured and sprayed onto paper Masonite and glass 12 13 10 In the early 1980s he began somewhat ironically painting small illusionistic gouaches of sailboats initially from observation or memory akin to Sunday painting 10 He eventually integrated them into wall constructions shown at Baskerville Watson 1986 and Cash Newhouse 1987 14 15 This work evolved into more widely known installations such as his 1991 show at Ealan Wingate based around photographs he took at Disney s Epcot The show featured mixed media images installed in a darkened room scored to Muzak and decorated and carpeted in mauve with plants and suburban benches reviews described it alternately as suffused with loss and nostalgia soothing and surprisingly spiritual 16 9 17 nbsp Dike Blair Untitled Gouache pastel and pencil on paper 12 x 9 2016 Blair s work has been shown at the Whitney Museum Secession Vienna Weatherspoon Art Museum Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles and Centre Pompidou 18 8 19 20 it belongs to the collections of the Whitney Brooklyn Museum and Los Angeles County Museum of Art among others 21 22 He received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2009 and the Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome in 2010 23 24 He lives in New York with his wife costume designer Marie Abma 10 24 Work and critical reception editBlair s two bodies of work serve as counterpoints and foils for one another in regard to composition color texture and theme 6 25 His realistic deadpan paintings primarily untitled painted in gouache and derived from his own snapshots are more literal yet illusionistic the Postminimal installation like sculpture is abstract but concrete and painterly 25 10 Together they investigate oppositions and liminal spaces between nature and architecture inside and outside fullness and emptiness and themes including pleasure and boredom escapism and transcendence and the intersection of designed environments mass experience and desire 26 3 27 nbsp Dike Blair to want to Painted wood carpet rubber mat fluorescent fixtures vinyl Duratrans 22 h x 150 w x 92 d 2005 Blair s earlier gouaches focus on diaristic largely American scenes bedside set ups cocktails cigarette butt littered ashtrays soda cans VHS tapes and anodyne transitory environments motels lounges lobbies Las Vegas Disneyland that Roberta Smith characterizes as background and details at the edges of a sophisticated travel weary terrain 6 9 28 Village Voice critic Jerry Saltz writes that the paintings combine a draftsman s attention to fact a botanist s eye for type and a detective s feel for telling clues resulting in a no man s land genre between illustration photography and forensic science 28 He likens the paintings to work by Richard Prince and Vija Celmins while others make comparisons to the light and illusionism of Vermeer and the solitude of Edward Hopper 28 29 18 3 In later paintings Blair turned to landscape close cropped flower images views through obscured windows and in the 2000s to close ups of eyes and nocturnal parking lots and snow scenes 30 25 29 Christopher Knight describes these later works largely devoid of people as brimming over with unconquerable wanderlust 7 In the mid 1990s Blair began producing decor like works inspired by contemporary corporate and domestic design and guided by Japanese flower arrangement rules 31 32 25 They compress installation work elements of light material color and image into discrete hybrid sculptures that evoke interiors furniture drawing architecture landscapes and the human body 33 11 30 Blair carefully manipulates elements such as electrical cords unfurling like lines across color fields of industrial carpet Plexiglas and plywood lightboxes shipping crates and lamps seeking a balance in which objects retain their specificity yet read together as singular works 34 32 30 Paralleling his gouaches the earlier sculptures examine themes involving atmosphere designed space and consumer culture while his post 2006 works take up phenomenological issues relating to the body such as ocular versus corporeal experience of images objects and space 1 27 8 5 Later exhibitions edit Blair s exhibitions at Feature 2001 2004 and Mary Goldman 2005 inclined toward increasingly spare refined presentation 33 27 32 They paired gouache paintings of lyrical water streaked windows and flowers with electrical cord and geometric carpet lengths glowing boxes and low slung Minimalist objects creating spaces that reviews describe as calming mysterious and melancholic domestic tableaux e g Some Of and And When 2001 to want to 2005 34 1 32 The Brooklyn Rail compared the effect of these exhibitions to the ambient music of artists such as Brian Eno tastefully calibrating momentary experience while remaining ambivalent about the consequences for subjectivity of living in a thoroughly designed world 27 nbsp Dike Blair Untitled Oil on aluminum panel 24 x 18 2018 In the later 2000s Blair placed greater emphasis on perceptual issues introducing close up paintings of women s eyes and painted shipping crates that simultaneously evoke functional objects picture planes space dividers walls and figures 30 8 35 For the survey Dike Blair Now and Again Weatherspoon Art Museum 2009 he produced a subtly staged and lit experience involving two sculpture courts mirror layouts to one another invoking the space in its entirety that flanked a series of galleries housing his gouaches Artforum described the show as an intimate and uncanny meditation on experiencing versus seeing real versus illusionistic space 8 In exhibitions at Gagosian 2010 Feature 2013 Linn Luhn 2014 and Jurgen Becker Gallery 2017 Blair continued to expand the range of allusions and effects painting crate sculpture sides like pebbled glass windows Those and These 2010 benday dot print patterns sometimes suggesting peepholes Dance Dance Dance 2011 and minimal intimations of skies and landscapes OHCE 2014 which he adorned with paintings of eyes interiors and other subjects 36 5 29 37 In 2017 Blair suspended his work on sculpture and took up oil painting 38 39 The subjects of those paintings are consistent which his gouaches sometimes the same image but the oils have a different physicality including very slight impasto and intaglio Around the same time he began producing drawings something that had not previously been part of his practice 40 38 Other professional activities editBlair s professional activities include writing and teaching He has contributed articles and reviews to Artforum 41 ARTnews 42 Art Press 43 Bomb 44 Harpers 45 and Parkett 46 and served as contributing and associate editor for the Parisian magazine Purple writing about design music technology film art and architecture 47 48 25 He has also written the books Again Selected Interviews and Essays 2007 and Punk 1978 with Isabelle Anscomber 49 50 Blair taught in the painting department at Rhode Island School of Design from 1997 to 2017 as well as at Art Institute of Boston New York University and University of Las Vegas 10 51 Awards and public collections editBlair has received a John S Guggenheim Fellowship 2009 the American Academy in Rome Prize 2010 and fellowships from the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation 1995 and Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation National Endowment for the Arts 1988 23 24 52 His work belongs to the public collections of the Whitney Museum 21 Brooklyn Museum 22 Los Angeles County Museum of Art Dallas Museum of Art 53 Musee Des Beaux Arts La Chaux De Fonds Switzerland MUMOK Vienna 54 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles 55 Portland Art Museum 56 and Weatherspoon Art Museum among others 57 References edit a b c d Princenthal Nancy Dike Blair Art in America May 2002 p 148 9 a b Rian Jeff Dike Blair New York New York Apartamento 2011 p 194 207 a b c Richard Frances Dike Blair Artforum March 2007 p 315 Retrieved November 17 2020 Schjeldahl Peter Dike Blair The New Yorker December 2018 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b c Wilk Deborah Dike Blair Modern Painters September 2013 p 110 a b c d Smith Roberta Dike Blair The New York Times November 2 2001 p E40 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b Knight Christopher Portraits of Transience Los Angeles Times May 18 2001 p F16 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b c d e Martin Cameron Dike Blair Artforum May 2010 p 242 3 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b c Rian Jeff Ouverture Dike Blair Flash Art November December 1997 p 104 a b c d e f g Stillman Steele In the Studio Dike Blair Art in America September 2009 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b c Prince Richard Window On Their World Dike Blair Interviewed by Richard Prince ArtReview 2005 p 78 81 Cohen Ronny H Energism An Attitude Artforum September 1980 p p 17 23 Retrieved November 17 2020 Cohen Ronny H Dike Blair Artforum January 1982 p 78 80 Retrieved November 17 2020 Sturtevant Alfred Dike Blair Arts April 1986 Heller Sally Dike Blair 108 An East Village Review January 1987 p 2 Hagen Charles Dike Blair The New York Times October 25 1991 p C5 Retrieved November 17 2020 The New Yorker Goings On About Town Photography October 28 1991 p 84 a b Griffin Tim Tim Griffin talks with the curators of the 2004 Whitney Biennial Artforum January 2004 p 57 9 Retrieved November 18 2020 Abramovich Alex Termite Art and the Modern Museum The New Yorker February 28 2019 Leguillon Pierre Purple Horizon Beaux Arts July 2000 p 40 a b Whitney Museum of American Art Dike Blair Artists Retrieved November 20 2020 a b Brooklyn Museum Lotus and Robot Dike Blair Collection Retrieved November 20 2020 a b Artforum Guggenheim Fellows Announced News April 10 2009 Retrieved November 18 2020 a b c American Academy in Rome The Glimpse Series Dike Blair Contemplates Japan While in Rome News March 1 2011 Retrieved November 20 2020 a b c d e Carlson Ben Working Practice Dike Blair Modern Painters June 2007 p 128 Griffin Tim The Intangible Economy Ricci Albenda Stephen Hendee Dike Blair Artext 70 August October 2000 p 66 71 a b c d White Roger Dike Blair The Brooklyn Rail May 2004 p 14 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b c Saltz Jerry Pulp Friction The Village Voice January 17 23 2007 a b c Smolik Noemi Dike Blair Artforum April 2017 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b c d Knight Christopher Dike Blair at Mary Goldman Gallery Los Angeles Times May 16 2008 Retrieved November 17 2020 Harrison Helen Stepping Beyond the Traditional in Still Lifes The New York Times October 10 1999 p LI14 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b c d Balaschak Chris Dike Blair Frieze November December 2005 p 141 Retrieved November 17 2020 a b Dailey Meghan Dike Blair Artforum January 2002 p 141 Retrieved November 18 2020 a b Williams Gregory Critics Picks Dike Blair Artforum November 2001 Retrieved November 17 2020 Gibson David Dike Blair Frieze September 2013 p 172 3 Retrieved November 17 2020 Fry Naomi Dike Blair Frieze November December 2010 Retrieved November 17 2020 Linn Luhn Dike Blair Exhibitions Retrieved December 5 2020 a b Rian Jeff Dike Blair Purple Issue 33 2020 Retrieved December 1 2020 The Modern Institute Dike Blair Retrieved December 5 2020 Blair Dike Dike Blair Drawings New York Karma 2019 Retrieved December 1 2020 Artforum Dike Blair Contributor Retrieved November 20 2020 Blair Dike Michael Goldberg ARTnews March 1991 p 142 3 Blair Dike Flip Flopping Fictions and the Interface of Some Spaces Art Press 21 2000 p 144 8 Blair Dike Cameron Martin Bomb Fall 2007 p 14 Retrieved November 20 2020 Blair Dike and Michael Drake Typing test Harper s March 2000 p 32 5 Retrieved November 20 2020 Blair Dike A Reflection or Two on Richard Prince Parkett 72 2004 p 96 107 Blair Dike Dan Colen Purple Spring Summer 2008 p 352 3 Retrieved November 20 2020 Blair Dike Anti Column Purple Fall Winter 2014 p 352 3 Retrieved November 20 2020 Blair Dike Again Selected Interviews and Essays Chicago Whitewalls 2007 Retrieved November 20 2020 Blair Dike and Isabelle Anscomber Punk New York Urizen Books Inc 1978 Retrieved November 20 2020 John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Dike Blair Fellows Retrieved November 17 2020 Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation 1995 Previous Winners Retrieved November 20 2020 Armstrong Annie Dallas Art Museum Adds Eight Works to Collection with Dallas Art Fair Acquisition Fund ARTnews April 11 2019 Retrieved November 20 2020 MUMOK Museum of Modern Art Stiftung Ludwig Wien Dike Blair Shine Collection Retrieved November 20 2020 Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles Dike Blair Collection Retrieved November 20 2020 Portland Art Museum Untitled three panels Dike Blair Collections Retrieved November 20 2020 Weatherspoon Art Museum Dike Blair Artist Retrieved November 20 2020 External links editDike Blair official website Dike Blair Guggenheim Fellowship page Dike Blair artist page Karma Dike Blair artist page Gagosian Dike Blair artist page Jurgen Becker Gallery DIKE BLAIR WITH STEEL STILLMAN Art in America 9 18 09 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Dike Blair amp oldid 1183898150, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.