Curated by Sukanya Rajaratnam
Curated by Sukanya Rajaratnam
Mary Lovelace O’Neal: Chasing Down the Image was a thrilling celebration of the artist’s career and her first exhibition in New York in over twenty-five years. Mnuchin Gallery is now able to deliver this show digitally, allowing viewers to relive their experience at the gallery, but also to allow viewers from across the world to see the work in a more comprehensive and fulfilling manner. The exhibition functions as a retrospective for the artist, covering fifty years and including pieces from key bodies of work that have formed her oeuvre from the late sixties through the present day. It also continues the gallery’s mission to bring to the fore artists who have been marginalized from the mainstream of art historical discussions.
Featured in the exhibition are works from Lovelace O’Neal’s important Lampblack series of the late sixties and early seventies. Begun during her student days in New York at the heyday of Minimalism, this series is in direct dialogue with that movement as she explores notions of flatness and challenges preconceived beliefs of who lays claim to abstraction, a means of expression at the time deemed inadequate to relay the experience of black artists. Mary Lovelace O’Neal: Chasing Down the Image additionally showcases critical pieces from her subsequent bodies of work, where she turns more fully to the gestural approaches of abstract expressionism while retaining the immense scale and mixed-media approach emblematic of her practice. These include the Whales Fucking series, inspired by her own experiences whale watching as well as D.H. Lawrence’s poem “Whales Weep Not!”; the Panther’s in My Father’s Palace series, where flurries of abstracted animals act as symbols of her childhood surrounded by music and her long history as an activist in the civil rights movement; and the Lost in the Medina and Two Deserts, Three Winters series, both of which tell the stories of her travels around the world and emphasize her impeccable use of color. As diverse as their starting points may be, to view them all as a group highlights the power of Lovelace O’Neal’s practice, and reflects the multifaceted nature of an artist who continues pushing the possibilities of abstraction to new heights.