ABOUT JENNIFER BARTLETT
Jennifer Losch Bartlett is an American artist. She is known for paintings and prints that combine the system-based aesthetic of Conceptual art with the painterly approach of Neo-expressionism.
Born: March 14, 1941 (age 79 years), Long Beach, CA
Children: Alice Isabelle
Education: Yale University, Yale School of Art, Mills CollegeJennifer Bartlett is a contemporary American artist whose paintings, drawings, and prints combine abstraction and representation, as seen in her large-scale installation Rhapsody (1975-1976). Bartlett’s subject matter is often mundane—a white chair, trees in a garden, a hallway—yet structured and formally analyzed in such a way as to give it a sense of profound meaning. She explores various methodologies to question the artistic form, asking, for example, what happens when a painting has no edges? “I did two big series. One was abstract and one was figurative. I think that an abstract painting is actually more figurative than a figurative painting, because it frequently is closer to the thing it is depicting,” she reflected. “If you paint a red square, you have a red square of a certain measurable dimension. If you paint a vase of flowers, the vase of flowers is not measurable—more abstract than the red square.” Born on March 14, 1941 in Long Beach, CA, Bartlett studied at Mills College in Oakland where she became friends with the noted abstract painter Elizabeth Murray. She went on to receive her MFA from the Yale School of Art, studying under Alex Katz and Al Held, alongside peers such as Brice Marden and Richard Serra. The artist currently lives and works in New York, NY. Today, Bartlett’s works are found in many institutional collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Tate Gallery in London, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, and the National Gallery in Washington, D.C., among others.
SOURCE: artnet.com
QUOTES BY JENNIFER BARTLETT
On attending Yale to study art: “Yes, I’d walked into my life.”
WHAT I WISH FOR YOU TODAY
Walk into YOUR life.