fbpx
Wikipedia

Maren Hassinger

Maren Hassinger (born Maren Louise Jenkins in 1947)[1] is an African-American artist and educator whose career spans four decades. Hassinger uses sculpture, film, dance, performance art, and public art to explore the relationship between the natural world and industrial materials.[2] She incorporates everyday materials in her art, like wire rope, plastic bags, branches, dirt, newspaper, garbage, leaves, and cardboard boxes.[2][3] Hassinger has stated that her work “focuses on elements, or even problems—social and environmental—that we all share, and in which we all have a stake…. I want it to be a humane and humanistic statement about our future together.”[2]

Maren Hassinger
Photograph of Maren Hassinger with work of art, 1973.
Born
Maren Louise Jenkins

1947 (age 75–76)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of California, Los Angeles,
Bennington College
Known forSculpture, Performance Art
SpousePeter Hassinger

Trained in dance, Hassinger transitioned to making sculpture and visual art in college.[4] Hassinger received her MFA in Fiber Arts from UCLA in 1973.[2] She was the director emeritus of the Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art for ten years.[5] She currently lives and works in New York City.

Early life

In 1947, Maren Louise Jenkins was born in Los Angeles, California, to Helen Mills Jenkins, a police officer and educator, and late father, Carey Kenneth Jenkins, an architect. At an early age, she showed a gift for art and was exposed to both her mother's interest in flower arranging and her father's work at his drafting table.[1]

Education

In 1965, she enrolled at Bennington College and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in sculpture in 1969. She originally intended to study dance, which she had practiced since she was five years old, at Bennington. Instead, she sought to incorporate aspects of dance into her sculptures.

During Hassinger's years at Bennington College, the institution was an all-women's college with mostly men serving as instructors, many of whom had New York gallery affiliations. Hassinger believed the institutional connections and affiliations of the instructors were distant from the experiences of many students, and she rejected the formal strategies that were being taught. In an essay on Hassinger's practice, Maureen Megerian wrote:

". . . Clement Greenberg's formalist approach dominated the art department, so instructors focused on the creation of abstract, Constructivist-inspired welded steel sculpture. Minimalism, then predominant in the New York art world, presented another model of formulaic, abstract art for students to follow. [Hassinger] ultimately rejected such strict formal strategies, although the discipline of these methods, especially such Minimalist devices as repetition and regular arrangement, provides her work with a rational underpinning that she consciously complicates and makes more emotionally engaging."[1]

She earned a Master of Fine Arts in fiber from UCLA in 1973. Hassinger discovered the wire rope in a Los Angeles junkyard while a student in the graduate program. This became a signature medium for her.[2]

Mid-life

In 1969, she moved to New York City to enroll in drafting courses and concurrently work as an art editor at a publishing company. As an editor, she managed the inclusion of African-American images in textbooks, "...a position she has described as 'demeaning.'"[1] Jenkins married writer Peter Hassinger and returned to Los Angeles with her husband in 1970.[6][1]

From 1984-1985, Hassinger worked at the Studio Museum in Harlem as an artist-in-residence.[7]

During the 1980s, the League of Allied Arts sponsored the musical Ain't Misbehavin honoring various Black artists. The League of Allied Arts is the longest running Black women's arts nonprofit arts organization in the Los Angeles area.[8] The musical took place at the Aquarius Theatre in Hollywood and Hassinger was among the several honored artists.[9]

Career and influences

Maren Hassinger started her artistic experimentation in a Los Angeles junkyard in the early 1970s, where she came across bulks of industrial wire rope. She found that the material could be used sculpturally and as a fiber that could be manipulated to resemble plant life. It was during this period in the 1970s that Hassinger began to collaborate with the sculptor Senga Nengudi.[10] Incorporating both sculptural and performance work, their collaborative sculptures have been considered ahead of their time due to their process of "combin[ing] sculpture, dance, theater, music and more with the collaborative spirit of community meetings and the avant-garde brio of Allan Kaprow's happenings."[11][12] Additionally, Hassinger utilizes movements of everyday life in her dance.[7]

While few of their works from the 1970s remain, Hassinger and Nengudi continue to collaborate, with Hassinger activating Nengudi's sculpture R.S.V.P.X as recently as 2014.[13]

Southern fiction writer Walker Percy continued to influence her childhood connection between the natural and the manufactured world with his work, Wreath. Many of Percy's novels, which Hassinger was reading at the time, are about navigating a modern world that was becoming removed from nature. Another influence which struck her was the sculpture work of Eva Hesse. During an exhibition at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1973 Hassinger was introduced to Hesse's work and admired her obsessive exploration of forms and techniques, and ability to convey emotion through fiber methods. Hassinger recalled:

"It was as if I was looking at somebody's spirit made manifest. . . it was an absolute gut level, wrenching experience. . . as if the sculpture were made flesh. . . later when I began to read about [Eva Hesse], it was as if she had managed somehow to put all the emotional truth of her life into that piece, and it communicated that way. . . It was a total true expression of life."[1]

Films

Through moving videos, Hassinger has explored personal family interactions and her own family history to tackle themes of identity. Her daughter, Ava Hassinger, is also an artist. The two have produced a video in which they perform improvisational choreography together under the title "Matriarch."[7] In 2004, Daily Mask, which is a 16mm film transferred to video, was made. It depicts Hassinger acting out her personal story and references back to an African past through associations to sculpture, art/cultural history, and feminist issues.[14]

Themes

Hassinger's work has been described as "ecological," but Hassinger herself does not see her work as such. Rather, she aims to produce humanistic statements about society and its commonalities.[7] She unveils how meaningless cultural stereotyping is due to the way it establishes racial and social barriers and buries away the similarities and parallels that exists between people. Moreover, Hassinger remains adamant on having contemporaneous conversations in regards to race and gender.[14] Additionally, Hassinger has addressed issues of equality with works like Love, a display made of hundreds of pink plastic bags, each containing a love note. Such pieces exemplify how she is able to evoke beauty and themes about society using everyday, common materials.[15]

Educator

From 1997 until 2017, she was the Director of the Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art.[16][5][17] Hassinger was an adjunct professor at Stony Brook University for five years.

Works

  • Twelve Trees #2, Mulholland Drive off-ramp, San Diego Freeway, northbound, Los Angeles, CA, 1979[18]
  • Leaning, 1980[19]
  • On Dangerous Ground, 1981[20]
  • Pink Trash, Lynwood, CA, 1982[21]
  • Necklace of Trees, Atlanta Festival for the Arts, Atlanta, GA, 1985-85
  • Bushes at Socrates Sculpture Park, Socrates Sculpture Park, Astoria, Queens, NY, 1988[22]
  • Plaza Planters and Tree Grates, Commissions for Downtown Seattle Transit Project, Seattle, WA, 1986–90
  • Field, Nasher Sculpture Center, 1989[23]
  • Tall Grasses, Roosevelt Island, New York, NY, 1989-90[24]
  • Circle of Bushes, for C. W. Post, Long Island University, Brookville, NY, 1991
  • Cloud Room, Commission for the Greater Pittsburgh International Airport, Pittsburgh, PA, 1992
  • Evening Shadows, University Art Museum, California State University, Long Beach, CA, 1993[25]
  • Window Boxes, Whitney Museum at Philip Morris, NY, 1993[14]
  • Fence of Leaves, P.S. 8, NY, 1995[14]
  • Ancestor Walk, Commission for the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs, 1996[26]
  • Art in the Garden, Grant Park, Chicago, IL, 2004-5[14]
  • Tree of Knowledge, 2019[27]

A subway station in New York City, the Central Park North – 110th Street (IRT Lenox Avenue Line) station, installed a work titled Message from Malcolm by Hassinger during a 1998 renovation. The work consists of mosaic panels on the platform and the main fare control area's street stairs depicting quotes and writings by Malcolm Xwritten in script and surrounded by mosaic borders.[28]

Collections

Hassinger has work held in the permanent collections of Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture, Baltimore, MD; California African American Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Portland Museum of Art, Portland, OR; The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York, NY; Williams College Art Museum, Williamstown, MA; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA; the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY.

Awards and honors

  • Lifetime Achievement Award from the Women’s Caucus for Art, Maryland Institute College of Art (2009)[29]
  • Grants, Joan Mitchell Foundation (1996)
  • Anonymous Was a Woman (1997)
  • Pollock-Krasner Foundation (2007)

Selected exhibitions

Maren Hassinger's work has been featured in exhibitions at numerous galleries and institutions including the following solo exhibitions:[30][31][32]

Selected group exhibitions include:[30][31][32]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Megerian, Maureen. “Entwined with Nature: The Sculpture of Maren Hassinger.” Woman's Art Journal, vol. 17, no. 2, 1996, pp. 21–25. JSTOR, JSTOR, www.jstor.org/stable/1358463.
  2. ^ a b c d e "Maren Hassinger". LANDMARKS. 2018-08-06. Retrieved 2021-09-30.
  3. ^ Frank, Priscilla (2017-02-20). "Museums Celebrate The Black Women Artists History Has Overlooked". HuffPost. Retrieved 2021-09-30.
  4. ^ "Maren Hassinger | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2021-09-30.
  5. ^ a b "Maren Hassinger, Director". MICA. 2018. Retrieved 2019-01-03.
  6. ^ "Maren Hassinger | Now Dig This! digital archive | Hammer Museum". Hammer Museum. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  7. ^ a b c d "The Spirit of Things | Art + Practice". www.artandpractice.org. Retrieved 2019-03-31.
  8. ^ "The League of Allied Arts | About Page".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  9. ^ "Finding aid for the League of Allied Arts records, 1940-2011, UCLA Library Special Collections".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  10. ^ "Senga Nengudi | Radical Presence NY". radicalpresenceny.org. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  11. ^ Nengudi, Senga (2014). Senga Nengudi : alt. Jones, Kellie, 1959-, White Cube (Gallery). London. ISBN 978-1906072872. OCLC 900736735.
  12. ^ Finkel, Jori (2011-11-27). "Q&A: Maren Hassinger and Senga Nengudi". Los Angeles Times. ISSN 0458-3035. Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  13. ^ Sherlock, Amy (16 February 2015). "Senga Nengudi". Frieze (169). Retrieved 2018-03-10.
  14. ^ a b c d e "Maren Hassinger Biography". African American Performance Art Archive. 2009-12-13. Retrieved 2022-10-09.
  15. ^ Valentine, Victoria (6 June 2018). "Maren Hassinger is Now Represented by Susan Inglett Gallery". Culture Type.
  16. ^ Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture (2011). Material Girls: Contemporary Black Women Artists (1st ed.). Baltimore, Md: Reginald F. Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History & Culture. p. 30. ISBN 9780615436142.
  17. ^ Frank, Priscilla (2017-02-20). "Museums Celebrate The Black Women Artists History Has Overlooked". Huffington Post. Retrieved 2017-07-01.
  18. ^ "Inside the Artist's Studio – Maren Hassinger". www.timesquotidian.com. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  19. ^ "Maren Hassinger. Leaning. 1980 | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved 2020-03-14.
  20. ^ "BOMB Magazine — Maren Hassinger by Mary Jones". bombmagazine.org. Retrieved 2017-07-01.
  21. ^ "BOMB Magazine — Maren Hassinger by Mary Jones". bombmagazine.org. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  22. ^ "Socrates Sculpture Park". socratessculpturepark.org. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  23. ^ "Collection Landing". www.nashersculpturecenter.org. Retrieved 2021-09-30.
  24. ^ "Maren Hassinger - NYC Department of Cultural Affairs". www.nyc.gov. Retrieved 2016-03-05.
  25. ^ "Evening Shadows". UAM SCULPTURE PARK, CA State University, Long Beach. Retrieved 5 March 2016.
  26. ^ "Maren Hassinger - NYC Department of Cultural Affairs". www.nyc.gov. Retrieved 2017-07-01.
  27. ^ "A Maren Hassinger Installation Blossoms From a "Tree of Knowledge" Rooted in a Majority Black Florida Town". Hyperallergic. 2020-02-17. Retrieved 2020-03-14.
  28. ^ "Artwork: Message from Malcolm (Maren Hassinger)". www.nycsubway.org. Retrieved 2014-02-01.
  29. ^ Women's Caucus for Art Honors MICA Graduate Faculty Maren Hassinger, Joyce Kozloff for Lifetime Achievement. 2014-02-03 at the Wayback Machine Maryland Institute College of Art. February 24, 2009. Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  30. ^ a b "Maren Hassinger . . . Dreaming". SPELMAN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF FINE ART. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  31. ^ a b "Faculty Biographies/Maren Hassinger" (PDF). Maryland Institute College of Art. Retrieved 5 March 2017.
  32. ^ a b "Maren Hassinger | Radical Presence NY". radicalpresenceny.org. Retrieved 2017-03-11.
  33. ^ "Oklahoma Contemporary Exhibitions". Mutual Art. MutualArt Services, Inc. Retrieved 17 December 2021.
  34. ^ "Exhibitions: Maren Hassinger, Monuments". www.studiomuseum.org. The Studio Museum in Harlem. 4 April 2018. Retrieved 19 September 2018.
  35. ^ Egan, Shannon, "Maren Hassinger: Lives" (2010). Schmucker Art Catalogs. Book 6. http://cupola.gettysburg.edu/artcatalogs/6

External links

  • Maren Hassinger - Portfolio, Official site

maren, hassinger, born, maren, louise, jenkins, 1947, african, american, artist, educator, whose, career, spans, four, decades, hassinger, uses, sculpture, film, dance, performance, public, explore, relationship, between, natural, world, industrial, materials,. Maren Hassinger born Maren Louise Jenkins in 1947 1 is an African American artist and educator whose career spans four decades Hassinger uses sculpture film dance performance art and public art to explore the relationship between the natural world and industrial materials 2 She incorporates everyday materials in her art like wire rope plastic bags branches dirt newspaper garbage leaves and cardboard boxes 2 3 Hassinger has stated that her work focuses on elements or even problems social and environmental that we all share and in which we all have a stake I want it to be a humane and humanistic statement about our future together 2 Maren HassingerPhotograph of Maren Hassinger with work of art 1973 BornMaren Louise Jenkins1947 age 75 76 Los Angeles California U S NationalityAmericanAlma materUniversity of California Los Angeles Bennington CollegeKnown forSculpture Performance ArtSpousePeter HassingerTrained in dance Hassinger transitioned to making sculpture and visual art in college 4 Hassinger received her MFA in Fiber Arts from UCLA in 1973 2 She was the director emeritus of the Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art for ten years 5 She currently lives and works in New York City Contents 1 Early life 2 Education 3 Mid life 4 Career and influences 5 Films 6 Themes 7 Educator 8 Works 9 Collections 10 Awards and honors 11 Selected exhibitions 12 References 13 External linksEarly life EditIn 1947 Maren Louise Jenkins was born in Los Angeles California to Helen Mills Jenkins a police officer and educator and late father Carey Kenneth Jenkins an architect At an early age she showed a gift for art and was exposed to both her mother s interest in flower arranging and her father s work at his drafting table 1 Education EditIn 1965 she enrolled at Bennington College and graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in sculpture in 1969 She originally intended to study dance which she had practiced since she was five years old at Bennington Instead she sought to incorporate aspects of dance into her sculptures During Hassinger s years at Bennington College the institution was an all women s college with mostly men serving as instructors many of whom had New York gallery affiliations Hassinger believed the institutional connections and affiliations of the instructors were distant from the experiences of many students and she rejected the formal strategies that were being taught In an essay on Hassinger s practice Maureen Megerian wrote Clement Greenberg s formalist approach dominated the art department so instructors focused on the creation of abstract Constructivist inspired welded steel sculpture Minimalism then predominant in the New York art world presented another model of formulaic abstract art for students to follow Hassinger ultimately rejected such strict formal strategies although the discipline of these methods especially such Minimalist devices as repetition and regular arrangement provides her work with a rational underpinning that she consciously complicates and makes more emotionally engaging 1 She earned a Master of Fine Arts in fiber from UCLA in 1973 Hassinger discovered the wire rope in a Los Angeles junkyard while a student in the graduate program This became a signature medium for her 2 Mid life EditIn 1969 she moved to New York City to enroll in drafting courses and concurrently work as an art editor at a publishing company As an editor she managed the inclusion of African American images in textbooks a position she has described as demeaning 1 Jenkins married writer Peter Hassinger and returned to Los Angeles with her husband in 1970 6 1 From 1984 1985 Hassinger worked at the Studio Museum in Harlem as an artist in residence 7 During the 1980s the League of Allied Arts sponsored the musical Ain t Misbehavin honoring various Black artists The League of Allied Arts is the longest running Black women s arts nonprofit arts organization in the Los Angeles area 8 The musical took place at the Aquarius Theatre in Hollywood and Hassinger was among the several honored artists 9 Career and influences EditMaren Hassinger started her artistic experimentation in a Los Angeles junkyard in the early 1970s where she came across bulks of industrial wire rope She found that the material could be used sculpturally and as a fiber that could be manipulated to resemble plant life It was during this period in the 1970s that Hassinger began to collaborate with the sculptor Senga Nengudi 10 Incorporating both sculptural and performance work their collaborative sculptures have been considered ahead of their time due to their process of combin ing sculpture dance theater music and more with the collaborative spirit of community meetings and the avant garde brio of Allan Kaprow s happenings 11 12 Additionally Hassinger utilizes movements of everyday life in her dance 7 While few of their works from the 1970s remain Hassinger and Nengudi continue to collaborate with Hassinger activating Nengudi s sculpture R S V P X as recently as 2014 13 Southern fiction writer Walker Percy continued to influence her childhood connection between the natural and the manufactured world with his work Wreath Many of Percy s novels which Hassinger was reading at the time are about navigating a modern world that was becoming removed from nature Another influence which struck her was the sculpture work of Eva Hesse During an exhibition at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1973 Hassinger was introduced to Hesse s work and admired her obsessive exploration of forms and techniques and ability to convey emotion through fiber methods Hassinger recalled It was as if I was looking at somebody s spirit made manifest it was an absolute gut level wrenching experience as if the sculpture were made flesh later when I began to read about Eva Hesse it was as if she had managed somehow to put all the emotional truth of her life into that piece and it communicated that way It was a total true expression of life 1 Films EditThrough moving videos Hassinger has explored personal family interactions and her own family history to tackle themes of identity Her daughter Ava Hassinger is also an artist The two have produced a video in which they perform improvisational choreography together under the title Matriarch 7 In 2004 Daily Mask which is a 16mm film transferred to video was made It depicts Hassinger acting out her personal story and references back to an African past through associations to sculpture art cultural history and feminist issues 14 Themes EditHassinger s work has been described as ecological but Hassinger herself does not see her work as such Rather she aims to produce humanistic statements about society and its commonalities 7 She unveils how meaningless cultural stereotyping is due to the way it establishes racial and social barriers and buries away the similarities and parallels that exists between people Moreover Hassinger remains adamant on having contemporaneous conversations in regards to race and gender 14 Additionally Hassinger has addressed issues of equality with works like Love a display made of hundreds of pink plastic bags each containing a love note Such pieces exemplify how she is able to evoke beauty and themes about society using everyday common materials 15 Educator EditFrom 1997 until 2017 she was the Director of the Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art 16 5 17 Hassinger was an adjunct professor at Stony Brook University for five years Works EditTwelve Trees 2 Mulholland Drive off ramp San Diego Freeway northbound Los Angeles CA 1979 18 Leaning 1980 19 On Dangerous Ground 1981 20 Pink Trash Lynwood CA 1982 21 Necklace of Trees Atlanta Festival for the Arts Atlanta GA 1985 85 Bushes at Socrates Sculpture Park Socrates Sculpture Park Astoria Queens NY 1988 22 Plaza Planters and Tree Grates Commissions for Downtown Seattle Transit Project Seattle WA 1986 90 Field Nasher Sculpture Center 1989 23 Tall Grasses Roosevelt Island New York NY 1989 90 24 Circle of Bushes for C W Post Long Island University Brookville NY 1991 Cloud Room Commission for the Greater Pittsburgh International Airport Pittsburgh PA 1992 Evening Shadows University Art Museum California State University Long Beach CA 1993 25 Window Boxes Whitney Museum at Philip Morris NY 1993 14 Fence of Leaves P S 8 NY 1995 14 Ancestor Walk Commission for the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs 1996 26 Art in the Garden Grant Park Chicago IL 2004 5 14 Tree of Knowledge 2019 27 A subway station in New York City the Central Park North 110th Street IRT Lenox Avenue Line station installed a work titled Message from Malcolm by Hassinger during a 1998 renovation The work consists of mosaic panels on the platform and the main fare control area s street stairs depicting quotes and writings by Malcolm Xwritten in script and surrounded by mosaic borders 28 Collections EditHassinger has work held in the permanent collections of Hammer Museum Los Angeles CA Reginald F Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture Baltimore MD California African American Museum Los Angeles CA Portland Museum of Art Portland OR The Studio Museum in Harlem New York NY Williams College Art Museum Williamstown MA San Francisco Museum of Modern Art San Francisco CA the Museum of Modern Art New York NY Awards and honors EditLifetime Achievement Award from the Women s Caucus for Art Maryland Institute College of Art 2009 29 Grants Joan Mitchell Foundation 1996 Anonymous Was a Woman 1997 Pollock Krasner Foundation 2007 Selected exhibitions EditMaren Hassinger s work has been featured in exhibitions at numerous galleries and institutions including the following solo exhibitions 30 31 32 Oklahoma Contemporary Nature Sweet Nature 2021 33 The Studio Museum in Harlem New York NY Maren Hassinger Monuments 2018 2019 Site specific works that are located in Marcus Garvey Park 34 Spelman College Museum of Fine Art Atlanta Georgia USA Maren Hassinger A Retrospective 2015 Reginald Ingraham Gallery Los Angeles California USA Maren Hassinger 2014 Spelman College Museum of Fine Art Atlanta Georgia USA Maren Hassinger Dreaming 2013 Schmucker Gallery Gettysburg PA USA Maren Hassinger Lives 2010 35 Contemporary Arts Forum and Alice Keck Park Santa Barbara CA Blanket of Branches and Dancing Branches 1986 Los Angeles County Museum of Art Los Angeles CA Gallery Six Maren Hassinger 1981 Just Above Midtown Downtown Gallery New York NY Beach 1980 Selected group exhibitions include 30 31 32 Brooklyn Museum Brooklyn NY We Wanted A Revolution Black Radical Women 1965 85 2017 Contemporary Arts Museum Houston Houston Texas USA Radical Presence Black Performance in Contemporary Art 2012 Havana Biennial Cinema Remixed and Reloaded 2 0 2012 Hammer Museum Los Angeles California USA Now Dig This Art of Black Los Angeles 1960 1980 2011 Institute of Contemporary Art Boston MA Dance Draw 2011 Spelman College Museum of Fine Art Atlanta Georgia USA Material Girls Contemporary Black Women Artists 2011 The Studio Museum in Harlem New York NY VideoStudio Playback 2011 Reginald F Lewis Museum Baltimore MD Material Girls 2011 Museum of Arts and Design New York NY Global Africa Project 2010 The Studio Museum in Harlem New York NY 30 Seconds off an Inch 2009 References Edit a b c d e f Megerian Maureen Entwined with Nature The Sculpture of Maren Hassinger Woman s Art Journal vol 17 no 2 1996 pp 21 25 JSTOR JSTOR www jstor org stable 1358463 a b c d e Maren Hassinger LANDMARKS 2018 08 06 Retrieved 2021 09 30 Frank Priscilla 2017 02 20 Museums Celebrate The Black Women Artists History Has Overlooked HuffPost Retrieved 2021 09 30 Maren Hassinger MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2021 09 30 a b Maren Hassinger Director MICA 2018 Retrieved 2019 01 03 Maren Hassinger Now Dig This digital archive Hammer Museum Hammer Museum Retrieved 2017 03 11 a b c d The Spirit of Things Art Practice www artandpractice org Retrieved 2019 03 31 The League of Allied Arts About Page a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Finding aid for the League of Allied Arts records 1940 2011 UCLA Library Special Collections a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link Senga Nengudi Radical Presence NY radicalpresenceny org Retrieved 2018 03 10 Nengudi Senga 2014 Senga Nengudi alt Jones Kellie 1959 White Cube Gallery London ISBN 978 1906072872 OCLC 900736735 Finkel Jori 2011 11 27 Q amp A Maren Hassinger and Senga Nengudi Los Angeles Times ISSN 0458 3035 Retrieved 2018 03 10 Sherlock Amy 16 February 2015 Senga Nengudi Frieze 169 Retrieved 2018 03 10 a b c d e Maren Hassinger Biography African American Performance Art Archive 2009 12 13 Retrieved 2022 10 09 Valentine Victoria 6 June 2018 Maren Hassinger is Now Represented by Susan Inglett Gallery Culture Type Reginald F Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History and Culture 2011 Material Girls Contemporary Black Women Artists 1st ed Baltimore Md Reginald F Lewis Museum of Maryland African American History amp Culture p 30 ISBN 9780615436142 Frank Priscilla 2017 02 20 Museums Celebrate The Black Women Artists History Has Overlooked Huffington Post Retrieved 2017 07 01 Inside the Artist s Studio Maren Hassinger www timesquotidian com Retrieved 2017 03 11 Maren Hassinger Leaning 1980 MoMA The Museum of Modern Art Retrieved 2020 03 14 BOMB Magazine Maren Hassinger by Mary Jones bombmagazine org Retrieved 2017 07 01 BOMB Magazine Maren Hassinger by Mary Jones bombmagazine org Retrieved 2017 03 11 Socrates Sculpture Park socratessculpturepark org Retrieved 2017 03 11 Collection Landing www nashersculpturecenter org Retrieved 2021 09 30 Maren Hassinger NYC Department of Cultural Affairs www nyc gov Retrieved 2016 03 05 Evening Shadows UAM SCULPTURE PARK CA State University Long Beach Retrieved 5 March 2016 Maren Hassinger NYC Department of Cultural Affairs www nyc gov Retrieved 2017 07 01 A Maren Hassinger Installation Blossoms From a Tree of Knowledge Rooted in a Majority Black Florida Town Hyperallergic 2020 02 17 Retrieved 2020 03 14 Artwork Message from Malcolm Maren Hassinger www nycsubway org Retrieved 2014 02 01 Women s Caucus for Art Honors MICA Graduate Faculty Maren Hassinger Joyce Kozloff for Lifetime Achievement Archived 2014 02 03 at the Wayback Machine Maryland Institute College of Art February 24 2009 Retrieved January 17 2014 a b Maren Hassinger Dreaming SPELMAN COLLEGE MUSEUM OF FINE ART Retrieved 5 March 2017 a b Faculty Biographies Maren Hassinger PDF Maryland Institute College of Art Retrieved 5 March 2017 a b Maren Hassinger Radical Presence NY radicalpresenceny org Retrieved 2017 03 11 Oklahoma Contemporary Exhibitions Mutual Art MutualArt Services Inc Retrieved 17 December 2021 Exhibitions Maren Hassinger Monuments www studiomuseum org The Studio Museum in Harlem 4 April 2018 Retrieved 19 September 2018 Egan Shannon Maren Hassinger Lives 2010 Schmucker Art Catalogs Book 6 http cupola gettysburg edu artcatalogs 6External links EditMaren Hassinger Portfolio Official site Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Maren Hassinger amp oldid 1117838919, 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.