Greg Colson

Greg Colson
Born Greg Colson
1956
Seattle, Washington, United States
Nationality American
Known for Painting, Sculpture, Drawing, Printmaking, Photography
Movement Assemblage (art), Lowbrow (art movement)

Greg Colson is an American artist best known for wall sculptures constructed of salvaged materials. Colson has had solo exhibitions throughout the United States and Europe, including Sperone Westwater (New York), Patrick Painter (Los Angeles), Galleria Cardi (Milan), Kunsthalle Lophem (Bruges, Belgium), Konrad Fischer (Düsseldorf), and the Lannan Museum (Lake Worth, Florida). Colson’s work is in many public collections, including the Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), the Whitney Museum of American Art (New York), the Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles), the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden (DC), the Panza Collection (Lugano, Switzerland), Sammlung Rosenkranz (Berlin), and the Moderna Museet (Stockholm).[1]

Background

Colson was born in Seattle, Washington (1956) and grew up in Bakersfield, California with his parents and two brothers Jeff and Doug. His father Lewis Colson was a social worker, but was also a skilled mechanic and inventive with makeshift repairs and adapting materials to new uses – which inspired his son’s appreciation of the ordinary and the rejected. The severe industrial environment of the Bakersfield area, and its accompanying attitudes and outlook, also affected Colson – particularly in its contrast to the large urban/cultural centers he would later inhabit as an artist. He earned an M.F.A. at Claremont Graduate School. He works and lives in Venice, California with his wife Dinah Kirgo.[2] [3]

Work

Among Colson’s body of work is a series of “stick maps” of cities such as Cleveland, San Jose and Baton Rouge. These sculptures are built of found lengths of various materials; ski poles, curtain rods, plastic plumbing pipe, wood molding – the structure becoming a metaphor for the manifold influences on a city. In another series of constructed “pie chart” paintings (based on socio-cultural surveys), Colson mocks the deluge of analysis that is so much a part of our daily existence by playing up the material and iconographic elements to such a degree that any actual understanding is subverted. Roberta Smith put it like this in her early New York Times review: “In nearly all of Mr. Colson’s works, the combination of modesty and grandiosity, of mental exactness and physical imprecision adds up to an odd, sad beauty. Elliptical as they are, his pieces often seem to scrutinize the conflict between the active center and deserted margins of industrialized society".[4]

Selected Collections[1]

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Greg Colson: The Architecture of Distraction, Griffin Editions, 2006
  2. Hulten, Pontus and Wegner, Peter (1999), Greg Colson, Whale and Star Press
  3. Rothman, Tibby (2006), Beyond the Image – Interview with Greg Colson, Venice Paper, Retrieved on 2009-6-27
  4. Smith, Roberta (January 5, 1990), These Are the Faces to Watch, The New York Times, retrieved May 4, 2010, Retrieved on 2009-6-27

Selected bibliography

Monographs

Selected Books and Catalogues

Selected Articles

External links

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Greg Colson.