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Judith Godwin

Judith Godwin (February 5, 1930 – May 29, 2021)[1] was an American abstract painter, associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement.

Judith Godwin
New York artists Kate Cordsen and Judith Godwin
Born(1930-02-05)February 5, 1930
DiedMay 29, 2021(2021-05-29) (aged 91)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materMary Baldwin College,
Richmond Professional Institute
Known forPainting
MovementAbstract Expressionism

Early life and education edit

Judith Godwin was born in Suffolk, Virginia, in 1930 to a father who was interested in architecture and landscape gardening. His interests created an environment that inspired and encouraged Judith to pursue painting.[2][3] She attended Mary Baldwin College in 1948 for two years.[2] It was there that she met Martha Graham, who performed there in 1950.[2] Godwin transferred to Richmond Professional Institute (RPI), now Virginia Commonwealth University, where she completed her degree in 1952. While there, she studied with Maurice Bond, Jewett Campbell, and Theresa Pollak.[2] At the time, women were required to wear a skirt in the cafeteria; Godwin wore jeans after rushing from a studio class and was reported to the dean of the school, Margaret Johnson, who then met with her and changed the rule to allow women to wear jeans.[2] While at RPI, she was in classes and close friends with Richard Carlyon.[2]

She also attended the Art Students League of New York, where she studied with artists Will Barnet, Harry Sternberg, and Vaclav Vytlacil. During this time she also attended the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts, and met artists such as Jackson Pollock, Franz Kline, Willem de Kooning, and Marcel Duchamp.[4] She lived in Greenwich Village, Manhattan, but as a native Virginian, remained a member of the Jamestowne Society. Her papers are held at the Archives of American Art.

Career edit

Godwin's first solo exhibition was in 1950 at Mountcastle's in Suffolk, Virginia.[2] At the suggestion of her RPI college instructor Jewett Campbell,[5] she moved to New York City in 1953 to attend the Art Students League and study under Hans Hofmann, who influenced her work heavily.[2][6] She studied with Hofmann in his studio on 8th Street, and noted his wife Miz as another important influence. Godwin said that... "I think the main thing with Hofmann was that I felt completely free to do whatever I wanted to do."[2] Godwin's notable classmates during this era included Will Barnet, Harry Sternberg, and Vaclav Vytlacil.[2] Godwin credited Hofmann with making her feel at home after moving to New York, as well as with challenging her conservative color palette and technique.[5] Hofmann also helped Godwin move away from the influence of cubism and towards abstract expressionism.[2]

In 1958, James Brooks invited her to participate in the Stable Gallery Invitational Show.[2][7] In the late 1950s, through Kenzo Okada, she met and was invited by Betty Parsons to join her new gallery, Section Eleven, becoming the youngest woman to ever show her work there.[2] At Betty Parsons' show, Godwin met the director for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, James Johnson Sweeney. He was interested in Godwin, and asked her to send a small collection of her work. He received Abstraction 1954 and Abstraction #15. He enjoyed her work, although at the time he did not add them to the Guggenheim Collection.[8] She shared a studio with Franz Kline.[2] She also met other prominent male artists such as Mark Rothko and Marcel Duchamp.[2]

Her success in mid-century Abstract Expressionism is notable, as there were few women celebrated among a movement associated with well-known male artists such as Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning.[9][10] In a 1981 interview, Godwin stated: "when I first went to New York in the early 1950s, there were just a few thousand painters living there... now there are tens of thousands so many people trying to gain notice, its unbelievable how competitive it is...." She credits her professor, Jewett Campbell, with her desire to move to New York City.[5]

In the 1980s she maintained three studios, one in a barn in Connecticut, one in Greenwich Village in New York City, and one in Suffolk, Virginia.[2] In 1999 Godwin was a panelist for "Hans Hofmann as Artist and Teacher" symposium at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.[2]

Style edit

Godwin was considered a second-generation abstract expressionist.[2] She practiced a style of painting that emphasized interpretation of experience and emotion through improvisational construction of the work, combining the language of color with gestural movements.[10] Her work was influenced by environmental causes, gardening, modern dance, and Zen. Her passion for the environment was a recurring element in her canvases, although these landscape elements refer to the artist's inner terrain, which often echo the disturbances of external nature.[11] Her early influences arose out of her childhood and having assisted her father with gardening.[2] Soon after moving to New York City, she became friends with Martha Graham through an earlier connection made while still a student at Mary Baldwin College.[2] Graham's performances influenced Godwin, who often incorporated the dancer and choreographer's dynamic gestures into the composition of a painting. Speaking of one such piece, her 9-foot wide diptych The Ring, Godwin said, "I most often begin to paint by envisioning form and space in nature and then interpret my ideas and feelings into planes of color on the canvas. When I recognize an emerging form, I respond intuitively by evolving complementary sub-forms in colors and applications which feel supportive and foster development. In studying color and its behavior, I have learned to trust my intuition."[3] Another of her paintings is titled Ode to Martha Graham.

Early in her career Godwin employed a strong, aggressive style in order to silence the male critics who dismissed women's contributions to the art world at that time. Over the course of her career her color palette evolved, first softening and later becoming bright again.[12] In the 1990s, Godwin began incorporating subtle assemblage to her canvases. Of this later direction she said, "I think it came out of needing to add something to the surfaces of my paintings...I don't want them to jump out."

In a statement made for "Celebration of Women in the Arts," at Northern Michigan University in 1978, Godwin said ..."The act of painting is for me, as a woman, an act of freedom, and a realization that images generated by the female experience can be a powerful and creative expression for all humanity. My paintings are personal statements - extensions of myself. I take a truth, an intimate emotion, a question, an answer – and paint it. It is natural for me to mediate upon reality rather than on the romantic, and yet my work often results in a mixture of both"[2]

Awards and honors edit

1989 Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA[2]

Professional Achievement Alumni Award from the School of the Arts, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA[2]

2002 Career achievement award from Mary Baldwin College, Staunton, VA[2]

Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters Degree from Mary Baldwin College, Staunton, VA[2]

Personal life edit

Her family home in Suffolk was called "Whitehall" and her ancestry goes back to the first settlers in the Virginia Colony.[2] Godwin's mother was Judith Brewer Godwin who was associated with the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities and a one-time president of the Garden Club of Virginia.[2] Godwin's father was Frank Whitney Godwin, a dentist and decorated veteran of World War I who later became a national vice commander of the American Legion, and was additionally an amateur architect.[2]

Judith Godwin was a cousin of Virginia Governor Mills E. Godwin, Jr.[2]

During the 1950s she embraced the Zen idea, living with few objects in a modest apartment in Greenwich Village.[2] During the 1950s and 1960s she took on jobs restoring houses and working as an apprentice to a plasterer and mason, as well as some interior design work and fabric design.[2] In 1963 Godwin purchased a brownstone in Greenwich Village previously owned by Franz Kline.[2]

During the 1980s she picketed against an annual furriers convention in New York.[2]

Collections edit

Exhibitions edit

  • 1950 Mountcastle's, Suffolk, VA[2]
  • 1951 Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences, Irene Leache Memorial, Norfolk, VA[2]
  • 1952 Abingdon Square Painters, New York City[2]
  • 1951–53 Group shows at the Valentine Museum and Linden Gallery, Richmond, VA[2]
  • 1953 Group show, Provincetown Art Association[2]
  • 1954 "An Environment of Expression", Theatre-Go-Round, Virginia Beach, VA[2]
  • 1954 Group show, Virginia Intermont College, Bristol, VA[2]
  • 1958 Stable Gallery Invitational Show, New York City[2]
  • 1958 Group Show, Betty Parsons, Section Eleven, New York City[2]
  • 1959 Group Show, Betty Parsons, Section Eleven, New York City[2]
  • 1959 Solo Show, Betty Parsons, Section Eleven, New York City[2]
  • 1959 Group Show, St. Lawrence University, Canton, NY[2]
  • 1960 Solo Show, Betty Parsons, Section Eleven, New York City[2]
  • 1960 Group Show, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO[2]
  • 1977 Solo Show, Ingber Gallery, New York City[2][6]
  • 1977–79 Group Shows, Ingber Gallery, New York City[2]
  • 1977–79 Danforth Museum, Danforth, MA[2]
  • 1977–79 University of Michigan, Marquette, MI[2]
  • 1977–79 Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA[2]
  • 1977–79 Weatherspoon Gallery, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, NC[2]
  • 1978 Solo Show, Mary Baldwin College, Staunton, VA[2]
  • 1979 Solo Show, Ingber Gallery, New York City[2]
  • 1980 Provincetown Art Association and Museum, "Hans Hofmann as Teacher: Drawings by His Students"[2]
  • 1981 Solo Show, Ingber Gallery, New York City[2]
  • 1981 Solo Show, Womensbank, Richmond, VA[2]
  • 1982 Solo Show, Loonan Gallery, Bridgehampton, NY[2]
  • 1983 Group Show, Marisa del Re Gallery, NY[2]
  • 1984 Solo Show, Northern Michigan University, Marquette[2]
  • 1985 Solo Show, Lockwood-Matthews Mansion Museum, Norwalk, CT[2]
  • 1986 Retrospective Solo Show, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Blacksburg, VA[2]
  • 1987 Solo Show, Ingber Gallery, NY[2]
  • 1987 Group Show, Graham Gallery, NY and PMW Gallery, Stanford, CT[2]
  • 1988 Solo Show, Northern Virginia Community College, Alexandria, VA[2]
  • 1989 Solo Show, Danville Museum, Danville, VA[2]
  • 1989 Solo Show, Virginia and Suffolk Museum, Virginia[2]
  • 1990 Group Show, Marisa del Re Gallery, NY[2]
  • 1991 Group Show, Marisa del Re Gallery, NY[2]
  • 1992 Solo Show, Marisa del Re Gallery, NY[2]
  • 1993-1994 Group Show, Marisa del Re Gallery, NY[2]
  • 1995-1996 Solo Show, Amarillo Museum of Art, Amarillo, TX[2]
  • 1997 Group Show, Marisa del Re Gallery, NY[2]
  • 1997 Solo Show, Art Museum of Western Virginia, Roanoke, VA[2]
  • 2000 Solo Show, Albany Museum of Art, Albany, GA[2]
  • 2001 Solo Show, Mary H. Dana Women Artists Series, Mabel Smith Douglass Library, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, New Brunswick, NJ[2]
  • 2002 Solo Show, Delaware Center for the Arts, Wilmington DE[2]
  • 2003 Holtzman Art Gallery, Towson University[22]
  • 2004 National Academy of Design's Annual Invitational Exhibition, NY, NY[2]
  • 2005 Group Show, "Betty Parsons and the Women", Anita Shapolsky Gallery, NY, NY[2]
  • 2008 Solo Show, McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX[2]
  • 2009 Tobin Theatre Arts Gallery[23]
  • 2010 Spanierman Gallery[24][25]
  • 2011 Spanierman Gallery[26]
  • 2012 Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and the Anderson Gallery of Virginia Commonwealth University
  • 2013 Group Show, "Ab-Ex/Re-Con", Nassau County Museum of Art, Roslyn, NY
  • 2016 Group Show, "Women of Abstract Expressionism", Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO.[27]
  • 2016 Group Show, "Women of Abstract Expressionism", Mint Museum, Charlotte, NC
  • 2017 Group Show, "Women of Abstract Expressionism", Palm Springs Art Museum, Palm Springs, CA
  • 2017, "Judith Godwin," Berry Campbell, New York
  • 2019, "Judith Godwin: An Act of Freedom," Berry Campbell, New York
  • 2023, Action, Gesture, Paint: Women Artists and Global Abstraction 1940-1970,Whitechapel Gallery,London.[28]

Further reading edit

  • Scala, Mark (ed.), Judith Godwin: Style and Grace. University of Washington Press, 1998. ISBN 0-295-97686-1
  • Lowery Stokes Sims and David Ebony, Judith Godwin: Early Abstractions. San Antonio, TX: McNay Art Museum, 2008. ISBN 0-916677-52-4

References edit

  1. ^ Berry Campbell Gallery news
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu Godwin, Judith. VMFA Virginia Artist File. Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, VA.
  3. ^ a b Marter, Joan, Catalog- Judith Godwin: Color and Movement, Rutgers University Mary H. Dana Women Artists Series, Mabel Smith Douglass Library, 2001.
  4. ^ "Godwin shows in Richmond". suffolknewsherald.com. September 18, 2012. Retrieved September 20, 2012.
  5. ^ a b c Robert Merritt (5/28/81). "Artist Maintains Suffolk Ties" Richmond Times-Dispatch.
  6. ^ a b "Judith Godwin". Gerald Peters Contemporary. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
  7. ^ "Judith Godwin - Artists - Spanierman Modern". www.spaniermanmodern.com. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
  8. ^ Gibson, Ann (1997). "Judith Godwin: Style and Grace" (PDF). Judith Godwin, Style and Grace (Roanoke Virginia: Art Museum of Western Virginia: 13–29. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
  9. ^ "Expressing Herself", Richmond Magazine, September 2012.
  10. ^ a b Patrick McCracken. "Judith Godwin" Amarillo Museum of Art, 1995–1996.
  11. ^ Cynthia Goodman. "Judith Godwin: Paintings and Drawings 1950-1979", Ingber Gallery, 1981.
  12. ^ Lowery Stokes Sims. "Judith Godwin: Objectified Gesture", reprinted from Judith Godwin: Early Abstractions (San Antonio: McNay Art Museum, 2008), 10–14.
  13. ^ "The Collection | Judith Godwin (American, born 1930)". MoMA. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  14. ^ "Collection | Judith Godwin (American, born 1930)". TheMet. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  15. ^ "Works in the Collection | Judith Godwin (American, 1930, Suffolk, Virginia)". SFMoMA. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  16. ^ "Godwin, Judith". The Art Institute of Chicago. AIC. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  17. ^ . Mbc.edu. 1941-02-16. Archived from the original on 2011-09-27. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  18. ^ "Judith Whitney Godwin". UMFA. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  19. ^ "Artist: Judith Godwin, (American, b. 1930)". Yale. Retrieved 2017-03-03.
  20. ^ "Judith Godwin". The Johnson Collection, LLC. Retrieved 2020-06-02.
  21. ^ "Judith Godwin". The Hyde. Retrieved 19 April 2023.
  22. ^ "Judith Godwin: Paintings | Baltimore City Paper". citypaper.com. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  23. ^ "Judith Godwin Early Abstractions". The Blind Swimmer. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  24. ^ Spanierman Gallery. "Judith Godwin Biography - Abstract Expressionist Painter". Spanierman Modern. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  25. ^ . Cityarts.info. 2010-12-15. Archived from the original on 2012-03-20. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  26. ^ McCarthy, Gerard (2012-09-05). "Judith Godwin - Reviews - Art in America". Artinamericamagazine.com. Retrieved 2013-02-01.
  27. ^ Marter, Joan M. (2016). Women of abstract expressionism. Denver New Haven: Denver Art Museum Yale University Press. p. 177. ISBN 9780300208429.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Judith Godwin at Wikimedia Commons
  • Official website
  • Askart.com information on Judith Godwin, including a color image of the work.
  • A Conversation with Judith Godwin, May 20, 2012

judith, godwin, february, 1930, 2021, american, abstract, painter, associated, with, abstract, expressionist, movement, york, artists, kate, cordsen, born, 1930, february, 1930suffolk, virginiadiedmay, 2021, 2021, aged, nationalityamericanalma, matermary, bald. Judith Godwin February 5 1930 May 29 2021 1 was an American abstract painter associated with the Abstract Expressionist movement Judith GodwinNew York artists Kate Cordsen and Judith GodwinBorn 1930 02 05 February 5 1930Suffolk VirginiaDiedMay 29 2021 2021 05 29 aged 91 NationalityAmericanAlma materMary Baldwin College Richmond Professional InstituteKnown forPaintingMovementAbstract Expressionism Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 3 Style 4 Awards and honors 5 Personal life 6 Collections 7 Exhibitions 8 Further reading 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education editJudith Godwin was born in Suffolk Virginia in 1930 to a father who was interested in architecture and landscape gardening His interests created an environment that inspired and encouraged Judith to pursue painting 2 3 She attended Mary Baldwin College in 1948 for two years 2 It was there that she met Martha Graham who performed there in 1950 2 Godwin transferred to Richmond Professional Institute RPI now Virginia Commonwealth University where she completed her degree in 1952 While there she studied with Maurice Bond Jewett Campbell and Theresa Pollak 2 At the time women were required to wear a skirt in the cafeteria Godwin wore jeans after rushing from a studio class and was reported to the dean of the school Margaret Johnson who then met with her and changed the rule to allow women to wear jeans 2 While at RPI she was in classes and close friends with Richard Carlyon 2 She also attended the Art Students League of New York where she studied with artists Will Barnet Harry Sternberg and Vaclav Vytlacil During this time she also attended the Hans Hofmann School of Fine Arts and met artists such as Jackson Pollock Franz Kline Willem de Kooning and Marcel Duchamp 4 She lived in Greenwich Village Manhattan but as a native Virginian remained a member of the Jamestowne Society Her papers are held at the Archives of American Art Career editGodwin s first solo exhibition was in 1950 at Mountcastle s in Suffolk Virginia 2 At the suggestion of her RPI college instructor Jewett Campbell 5 she moved to New York City in 1953 to attend the Art Students League and study under Hans Hofmann who influenced her work heavily 2 6 She studied with Hofmann in his studio on 8th Street and noted his wife Miz as another important influence Godwin said that I think the main thing with Hofmann was that I felt completely free to do whatever I wanted to do 2 Godwin s notable classmates during this era included Will Barnet Harry Sternberg and Vaclav Vytlacil 2 Godwin credited Hofmann with making her feel at home after moving to New York as well as with challenging her conservative color palette and technique 5 Hofmann also helped Godwin move away from the influence of cubism and towards abstract expressionism 2 In 1958 James Brooks invited her to participate in the Stable Gallery Invitational Show 2 7 In the late 1950s through Kenzo Okada she met and was invited by Betty Parsons to join her new gallery Section Eleven becoming the youngest woman to ever show her work there 2 At Betty Parsons show Godwin met the director for the Solomon R Guggenheim Museum James Johnson Sweeney He was interested in Godwin and asked her to send a small collection of her work He received Abstraction 1954 and Abstraction 15 He enjoyed her work although at the time he did not add them to the Guggenheim Collection 8 She shared a studio with Franz Kline 2 She also met other prominent male artists such as Mark Rothko and Marcel Duchamp 2 Her success in mid century Abstract Expressionism is notable as there were few women celebrated among a movement associated with well known male artists such as Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning 9 10 In a 1981 interview Godwin stated when I first went to New York in the early 1950s there were just a few thousand painters living there now there are tens of thousands so many people trying to gain notice its unbelievable how competitive it is She credits her professor Jewett Campbell with her desire to move to New York City 5 In the 1980s she maintained three studios one in a barn in Connecticut one in Greenwich Village in New York City and one in Suffolk Virginia 2 In 1999 Godwin was a panelist for Hans Hofmann as Artist and Teacher symposium at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City 2 Style editGodwin was considered a second generation abstract expressionist 2 She practiced a style of painting that emphasized interpretation of experience and emotion through improvisational construction of the work combining the language of color with gestural movements 10 Her work was influenced by environmental causes gardening modern dance and Zen Her passion for the environment was a recurring element in her canvases although these landscape elements refer to the artist s inner terrain which often echo the disturbances of external nature 11 Her early influences arose out of her childhood and having assisted her father with gardening 2 Soon after moving to New York City she became friends with Martha Graham through an earlier connection made while still a student at Mary Baldwin College 2 Graham s performances influenced Godwin who often incorporated the dancer and choreographer s dynamic gestures into the composition of a painting Speaking of one such piece her 9 foot wide diptych The Ring Godwin said I most often begin to paint by envisioning form and space in nature and then interpret my ideas and feelings into planes of color on the canvas When I recognize an emerging form I respond intuitively by evolving complementary sub forms in colors and applications which feel supportive and foster development In studying color and its behavior I have learned to trust my intuition 3 Another of her paintings is titled Ode to Martha Graham Early in her career Godwin employed a strong aggressive style in order to silence the male critics who dismissed women s contributions to the art world at that time Over the course of her career her color palette evolved first softening and later becoming bright again 12 In the 1990s Godwin began incorporating subtle assemblage to her canvases Of this later direction she said I think it came out of needing to add something to the surfaces of my paintings I don t want them to jump out In a statement made for Celebration of Women in the Arts at Northern Michigan University in 1978 Godwin said The act of painting is for me as a woman an act of freedom and a realization that images generated by the female experience can be a powerful and creative expression for all humanity My paintings are personal statements extensions of myself I take a truth an intimate emotion a question an answer and paint it It is natural for me to mediate upon reality rather than on the romantic and yet my work often results in a mixture of both 2 Awards and honors edit1989 Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond VA 2 Professional Achievement Alumni Award from the School of the Arts Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond VA 2 2002 Career achievement award from Mary Baldwin College Staunton VA 2 Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters Degree from Mary Baldwin College Staunton VA 2 Personal life editHer family home in Suffolk was called Whitehall and her ancestry goes back to the first settlers in the Virginia Colony 2 Godwin s mother was Judith Brewer Godwin who was associated with the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities and a one time president of the Garden Club of Virginia 2 Godwin s father was Frank Whitney Godwin a dentist and decorated veteran of World War I who later became a national vice commander of the American Legion and was additionally an amateur architect 2 Judith Godwin was a cousin of Virginia Governor Mills E Godwin Jr 2 During the 1950s she embraced the Zen idea living with few objects in a modest apartment in Greenwich Village 2 During the 1950s and 1960s she took on jobs restoring houses and working as an apprentice to a plasterer and mason as well as some interior design work and fabric design 2 In 1963 Godwin purchased a brownstone in Greenwich Village previously owned by Franz Kline 2 During the 1980s she picketed against an annual furriers convention in New York 2 Collections editMuseum of Modern Art 13 Metropolitan Museum of Art 14 San Francisco Museum of Modern Art 15 National Gallery of Art Washington D C Chicago Art Institute 16 Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden 17 Utah Museum of Fine Arts 18 Yale University Art Gallery 19 Milwaukee Art Center 2 National Museum of Art Osaka Japan 2 National Museum of Wales Cardiff South Wales 2 National Museum of Women in the Arts Washington DC 2 North Carolina Museum of Art 2 Newark Museum Newark New Jersey 2 Amarillo Museum of Art Amarillo TX 2 Greenville County Museum of Art Greenville South Carolina 2 The Johnson Collection Spartanburg South Carolina 20 Herbert F Johnson Museum of Art Cornell University Ithaca NY 2 Gannett Center Columbia University NY 2 Mary Baldwin College Staunton VA 2 Mount Holyoke College Art Museum Mount Holyoke MA 2 Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery University of Nebraska Lincoln NE 2 Ulrich Museum Wichita State University Wichita KS 2 University of Pennsylvania Philadelphia PA 2 Weatherspoon Art Gallery University of North Carolina Greensboro NC 2 Vassar College Museum Poughkeepsie NY 2 Smith College Museum of Art Northampton MA 2 The Hyde Collection Glenn Falls New York 21 Exhibitions edit1950 Mountcastle s Suffolk VA 2 1951 Norfolk Museum of Arts and Sciences Irene Leache Memorial Norfolk VA 2 1952 Abingdon Square Painters New York City 2 1951 53 Group shows at the Valentine Museum and Linden Gallery Richmond VA 2 1953 Group show Provincetown Art Association 2 1954 An Environment of Expression Theatre Go Round Virginia Beach VA 2 1954 Group show Virginia Intermont College Bristol VA 2 1958 Stable Gallery Invitational Show New York City 2 1958 Group Show Betty Parsons Section Eleven New York City 2 1959 Group Show Betty Parsons Section Eleven New York City 2 1959 Solo Show Betty Parsons Section Eleven New York City 2 1959 Group Show St Lawrence University Canton NY 2 1960 Solo Show Betty Parsons Section Eleven New York City 2 1960 Group Show University of Colorado Boulder CO 2 1977 Solo Show Ingber Gallery New York City 2 6 1977 79 Group Shows Ingber Gallery New York City 2 1977 79 Danforth Museum Danforth MA 2 1977 79 University of Michigan Marquette MI 2 1977 79 Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond VA 2 1977 79 Weatherspoon Gallery University of North Carolina Greensboro NC 2 1978 Solo Show Mary Baldwin College Staunton VA 2 1979 Solo Show Ingber Gallery New York City 2 1980 Provincetown Art Association and Museum Hans Hofmann as Teacher Drawings by His Students 2 1981 Solo Show Ingber Gallery New York City 2 1981 Solo Show Womensbank Richmond VA 2 1982 Solo Show Loonan Gallery Bridgehampton NY 2 1983 Group Show Marisa del Re Gallery NY 2 1984 Solo Show Northern Michigan University Marquette 2 1985 Solo Show Lockwood Matthews Mansion Museum Norwalk CT 2 1986 Retrospective Solo Show Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University Blacksburg VA 2 1987 Solo Show Ingber Gallery NY 2 1987 Group Show Graham Gallery NY and PMW Gallery Stanford CT 2 1988 Solo Show Northern Virginia Community College Alexandria VA 2 1989 Solo Show Danville Museum Danville VA 2 1989 Solo Show Virginia and Suffolk Museum Virginia 2 1990 Group Show Marisa del Re Gallery NY 2 1991 Group Show Marisa del Re Gallery NY 2 1992 Solo Show Marisa del Re Gallery NY 2 1993 1994 Group Show Marisa del Re Gallery NY 2 1995 1996 Solo Show Amarillo Museum of Art Amarillo TX 2 1997 Group Show Marisa del Re Gallery NY 2 1997 Solo Show Art Museum of Western Virginia Roanoke VA 2 2000 Solo Show Albany Museum of Art Albany GA 2 2001 Solo Show Mary H Dana Women Artists Series Mabel Smith Douglass Library Rutgers The State University of New Jersey New Brunswick NJ 2 2002 Solo Show Delaware Center for the Arts Wilmington DE 2 2003 Holtzman Art Gallery Towson University 22 2004 National Academy of Design s Annual Invitational Exhibition NY NY 2 2005 Group Show Betty Parsons and the Women Anita Shapolsky Gallery NY NY 2 2008 Solo Show McNay Art Museum San Antonio TX 2 2009 Tobin Theatre Arts Gallery 23 2010 Spanierman Gallery 24 25 2011 Spanierman Gallery 26 2012 Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and the Anderson Gallery of Virginia Commonwealth University 2013 Group Show Ab Ex Re Con Nassau County Museum of Art Roslyn NY 2016 Group Show Women of Abstract Expressionism Denver Art Museum Denver CO 27 2016 Group Show Women of Abstract Expressionism Mint Museum Charlotte NC 2017 Group Show Women of Abstract Expressionism Palm Springs Art Museum Palm Springs CA 2017 Judith Godwin Berry Campbell New York 2019 Judith Godwin An Act of Freedom Berry Campbell New York 2023 Action Gesture Paint Women Artists and Global Abstraction 1940 1970 Whitechapel Gallery London 28 Further reading editScala Mark ed Judith Godwin Style and Grace University of Washington Press 1998 ISBN 0 295 97686 1 Lowery Stokes Sims and David Ebony Judith Godwin Early Abstractions San Antonio TX McNay Art Museum 2008 ISBN 0 916677 52 4References edit Berry Campbell Gallery news a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz ca cb cc cd ce cf cg ch ci cj ck cl cm cn co cp cq cr cs ct cu Godwin Judith VMFA Virginia Artist File Virginia Museum of Fine Arts Richmond VA a b Marter Joan Catalog Judith Godwin Color and Movement Rutgers University Mary H Dana Women Artists Series Mabel Smith Douglass Library 2001 Godwin shows in Richmond suffolknewsherald com September 18 2012 Retrieved September 20 2012 a b c Robert Merritt 5 28 81 Artist Maintains Suffolk Ties Richmond Times Dispatch a b Judith Godwin Gerald Peters Contemporary Retrieved 19 March 2019 Judith Godwin Artists Spanierman Modern www spaniermanmodern com Retrieved 2020 06 02 Gibson Ann 1997 Judith Godwin Style and Grace PDF Judith Godwin Style and Grace Roanoke Virginia Art Museum of Western Virginia 13 29 Retrieved 19 March 2019 Expressing Herself Richmond Magazine September 2012 a b Patrick McCracken Judith Godwin Amarillo Museum of Art 1995 1996 Cynthia Goodman Judith Godwin Paintings and Drawings 1950 1979 Ingber Gallery 1981 Lowery Stokes Sims Judith Godwin Objectified Gesture reprinted from Judith Godwin Early Abstractions San Antonio McNay Art Museum 2008 10 14 The Collection Judith Godwin American born 1930 MoMA Retrieved 2013 02 01 Collection Judith Godwin American born 1930 TheMet Retrieved 2017 03 03 Works in the Collection Judith Godwin American 1930 Suffolk Virginia SFMoMA Retrieved 2017 03 03 Godwin Judith The Art Institute of Chicago AIC Retrieved 2017 03 03 A Tribute to Judith Godwin Studio Art Mbc edu 1941 02 16 Archived from the original on 2011 09 27 Retrieved 2013 02 01 Judith Whitney Godwin UMFA Retrieved 2017 03 03 Artist Judith Godwin American b 1930 Yale Retrieved 2017 03 03 Judith Godwin The Johnson Collection LLC Retrieved 2020 06 02 Judith Godwin The Hyde Retrieved 19 April 2023 Judith Godwin Paintings Baltimore City Paper citypaper com Retrieved 2013 02 01 Judith Godwin Early Abstractions The Blind Swimmer Retrieved 2013 02 01 Spanierman Gallery Judith Godwin Biography Abstract Expressionist Painter Spanierman Modern Retrieved 2013 02 01 Judith Godwin City Arts City Arts Cityarts info 2010 12 15 Archived from the original on 2012 03 20 Retrieved 2013 02 01 McCarthy Gerard 2012 09 05 Judith Godwin Reviews Art in America Artinamericamagazine com Retrieved 2013 02 01 Marter Joan M 2016 Women of abstract expressionism Denver New Haven Denver Art Museum Yale University Press p 177 ISBN 9780300208429 Action Gesture Paint Whitechapel Gallery Retrieved 19 April 2023 External links edit nbsp Media related to Judith Godwin at Wikimedia Commons Official website Askart com information on Judith Godwin including a color image of the work A Conversation with Judith Godwin May 20 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Judith Godwin amp oldid 1190329602, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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