Rosalyn Drexler

Rosalyn Drexler (born 1926) is a Pop artist, novelist, Obie Award-winning playwright, and Emmy Award-winning screenwriter. She is represented by Pace Gallery.[1]

Contents

Biography

Early life

Rosalyn Drexler (née Bronznick) was born in 1926 in the Bronx, New York. She attended the High School of Music and Art in New York City where she majored in voice. She attended Hunter College for one semester only before leaving school to marry figure painter Sherman Drexler in 1946.[2] She is the subject of many of her husband's paintings.[3] They have a daughter and a son.

Rosa Carlo, the Mexican Spitfire

In 1951 Drexler pursued a brief career as a professional wrestler under the name "Rosa Carlo, the Mexican Spitfire."[4] Andy Warhol made a series of silkscreen paintings based on a Polaroid he took of Drexler dressed as a lady wrestler.[5] Drexler's experience as Rosa Carlo later formed the basis of her 1972 critically acclaimed novel To Smithereens. The novel inspired the 1980 film Below the Belt.

Artistic career

Drexler began making found-object sculptures while living in Berkeley, California where her husband was finishing his art degree. Made as amusements for display in her home, Drexler exhibited her work once she moved back to New York City at the urging of dealer Ivan Karp. One critic called these early works "ridiculous and nutty" sculptures that revealed a "real beauty beneath their I-don't-care attitudes."[6]

Drexler had her first solo exhibition in 1960 at New York's Reuben Gallery, a downtown cooperative that showed other emerging Pop artists such as George Segal and Claes Oldenburg, as well as Allan Kaprow and other Fluxus artists. The first Happenings also took place at the Reuben Gallery, in which Drexler participated.[7] However, the Reuben Gallery closed after a year. While other artists had little difficulty finding representation elsewhere, Drexler struggled.

Women were not bankable at that time. Every other male artist…other galleries came along. I received no offers. In my naivete I thought it was because I was not a painter so I must make paintings. —Rosalyn Drexler[8]

Despite encouragement from sculptor David Smith to continue working in the same medium, Drexler switched her focus to painting in the early 1960s.[9] Entirely self-taught, her process consisted of blowing up images from magazines and newspapers, collaging them on to canvas, and then painting over them in bright, saturated colors. Drexler started appropriating popular imagery in her art at the same time as Andy Warhol and Roy Lichtenstein were developing similar techniques, putting her at the forefront of the Pop art movement.

Drexler eventually signed with Kornblee Gallery, where she had solo shows in 1964-1966. In January 1964 her work was included in the "First International Girlie Exhibit" at Pace Gallery, New York. She and Marjorie Strider were the only two women Pop artists included in this landmark exhibition, which otherwise featured a variety of male artists including Warhol, Lichtenstein, and Tom Wesselmann. Drexler exhibited collages cut and pasted from girlie magazines. The work scandalized many, but her paintings were otherwise well-received. As one critic noted, "Miss Drexler’s collage paintings…fly through contemporary life and fantasy with a virtuosic, uninhibited imagination that is refreshingly direct in its frank expression of brutality, desire, pathos and playfulness."[10]

Although her paintings continued to enjoy favorable reviews and were exhibited in major Pop art exhibitions throughout the 1960s, Drexler did not gain the same level of recognition or success as many of her male peers. Not only was she a woman in a male-dominated field, the major themes in her paintings—violence against women, racism, social alienation—were decidedly "hot" topics in a genre known for being "cool" and detached.[11] For these reasons, her Pop paintings have been identified more recently as early feminist artworks, yet Drexler vehemently objects to the label.

Don't try to make me into a politically conscious artist. I wasn't. I don't teach lessons...My work does not lend itself to causes. Unless it does when I'm not looking. —Rosalyn Drexler[12]

In 1968, Drexler signed the “Writers and Editors War Tax Protest” pledge, vowing to refuse tax payments in protest against the Vietnam War.[13]

Major Themes & Works

Selected Exhibitions

Solo Exhibitions

Group Exhibitions

1960

1961

1962

1963

1964

1965

1966

1967

1970

1972

1974

1975

1977

1978

1979

1984

1987

1991

1992

2001

2007

2010

Selected Public Collections

Books

Novels

Adapted Screenplays

written under the pseudonym Julia Sorel

Plays

Published work

Productions

Film and Television

TV

Film

Awards

Further reading

External links

References

  1. ^ http://www.pacewildenstein.com
  2. ^ Roberta Fallon, "You couldn't have known my work. How could you?" the artblog, March 27, 2004.http://theartblog.org/2004/03/rosalyn-drexler-you-couldnt-have-known-my-work-how-could-you/
  3. ^ "Her husband, a figure painter, considers her his only model—and 'that's the way it had damed well better be,' said Mrs. Drexler." Excerpt from Grace Glueck, "Hip Heidi," The New York Times, April 25, 1965. See also "Sherman Drexler. Art Paradise: Fifty Years of Painting. January 13-February 12, 2005" Press release, Mitchell Algus Gallery, 2005. http://mitchellalgus.com/pr/sdrexlerpr05.html
  4. ^ Roni Feinstein, "Strangers No More," Art in America, June/July 2007, p. 177. See also Roberta Fallon, "You couldn't have known my work. How could you?" the artblog, March 27, 2004.http://theartblog.org/2004/03/rosalyn-drexler-you-couldnt-have-known-my-work-how-could-you
  5. ^ Bradford R. Collins, "Reclamations: Rosalyn Drexler's Early Pop Paintings, 1961-1967," in Sachs and Minioudaki, Seductive Subversion: Women Pop Artists, 1958-1968, University of the Arts, Philadelphia, New York and London: Abbeville Press, 2010, p. 164.
  6. ^ V.P. "Nine [Tanager], " ARTNews, Summer 1961, p. 18.
  7. ^ L.C. "Three More Faces of Eve: Rosalyn Drexler," ARTNews, March 1964, p. 64. See also Bradford R. Collins, "Reclamations: Rosalyn Drexler's Early Pop Paintings, 1961-67" in Sachs and Minioudaki (2010), p. 164.
  8. ^ Rosalyn Drexler, as quoted in Roberta Fallon, "You couldn't have known my work. How could you?" the artblog, March 27, 2004.http://theartblog.org/2004/03/rosalyn-drexler-you-couldnt-have-known-my-work-how-could-you/
  9. ^ Elaine de Kooning with Rosalyn Drexler, "Why Have Their Been No Great Women Artists? Eight Artists Reply. Dialogue," ARTnews, January 1971.
  10. ^ J.J., “Rosayln Drexler and Tom Doyle [Zabriskie; April 15-May 4]” ARTNews, April 1963, p. 14.”
  11. ^ Bradford R. Collins, "Reclamations: Rosalyn Drexler's Early Pop Paintings, 1961-67" in Sachs and Minioudaki (2010), p. 162.
  12. ^ Rosalyn Drexler, as quoted in Bradford R. Collins (2010), p. 166.
  13. ^ “Writers and Editors War Tax Protest” January 30, 1968 New York Post
  14. ^ Collins (2010), p. 166.
  15. ^ Jorge Daniel Veneciano, "Rosalyn Drexler and the Ends of Man," in Rosalyn Drexler and the Ends of Man, exhibition catalogue, Paul Robeson Gallery, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 2006, pp. 16-18.