Elisa Pritzker

Last updated

Elisa Pritzker
Born1955
Nationality
  • Argentina
  • United States
EducationMaster of Fine Arts
Alma materSuperior School of Visual Arts
OccupationVisual artist
Website elisapritzker.com

Elisa Pritzker (born 1955) is an Argentine-American artist working in a variety of two- and three-dimensional art media. [1] [2]

Contents

Background

In Argentina, Pritzker studied at the School of Ceramics and earned her certification in 1976. She also attended the Superior School of Visual Arts earning her Master of Fine Arts degree in 1987. Pritzker went on to teach at both schools, the School of Ceramics from 1982 to 1989 and at the Superior School of Visual Arts from 1987 to 1989. [3]

She resides with her husband, entrepreneur Enrique Rob Lunski, at their estate, Casa del Arte, in Ulster County, New York. [4]

Art

In 1993, Pritzker moved to the United States and settled in New York State's Hudson Valley, [5] where she embarked on a series of artworks on the themes of love, war and peace which eventually evolved into projects with deeper roots using non-traditional materials. [6]

"CD Project"

In the "CD Project," Pritzker created "@Maya," in 2001–2004, and "Nature versus Technology" for the Kingston Sculpture Biennial of 2005. In these works, Pritzker recycled CDs in ways contradictory to their manufactured purpose. In "@Maya," she drew Mayan scientific and astrological signs and symbols on the surface of the CDs, thus cross-referencing the science of the Maya with the technological language of contemporary America. For "Nature versus Technology," she covered the lower section of a living tree in CDs in a wooded area of Kingston, New York. The work served as an inquiry into the ramifications of technology encroaching on the natural environment. [3]

"Buddha Project"

In 2007, as part of the "No East-No West" exhibition at the Van Brunt Gallery in Beacon, New York, Pritzker created the "Buddha Project," an installation conceived as an allegory to enter into the inner self. The installation occupied its own room in the gallery and featured images of Buddha as a silhouette and small veneration objects, meditation boxes, and other objects associated with contemplation. The gallery floor was arranged with white sand and a bowl of water, representing the Buddhist symbols of purity, meditation cushions and a path of stones. The room culminated in a large and colorful "Eyes of the Buddha," which Pritzker painted directly on the gallery wall. Beneath the painting, on the ledge of the lower molding of the wall, Pritzker arranged a line of incense cones as ritualistic symbols. At the close of the exhibition, Pritzker painted over the "Eyes of the Buddha," returning the wall to its original white, following the Buddhist tradition of mandalas, the complex patterns painstakingly created with various colors of sand, then destroyed, the Tantric ritual complete. [7]

"URBA.NATURAL"

The "Buddha Project" prompted Pritzker's interest in installation work. Concurrent with this interest in installation, Pritzker was drawn towards an art which interacted with nature, physically, aesthetically and philosophically. Her "URBA.NATURAL", dating from 2010, consisted of four projects: "zippers;" "trunks;" "birds.dogs.deer;" and "antlers.jaws.skin." [3] In "zippers," Pritzker uses the motif of the zipper to reveal nature and humanity's place within it. In "trunks," Pritzker incongruously united two of her long expressed themes, nature and human experience, by placing men's underwear or trouser torsos on trunks of trees. "birds.dogs.deer" brought together such diverse elements including porcelain, ceramic and resin figures of dogs, twigs, painted CDs and hand painted additions to photographs printed on aluminum. For "antlers.jaws.skin," she reached deep into her South American heritage and merged it with her connection to nature, drawing lines and shapes reflective of indigenous peoples on animal bones. [8]

Other projects

In 2012, Pritzker created the "Eclectica Store/Hudson Valley," utilizing objects she'd collected or created over the years, and set them up as a store. [9] In this expression of a store as art form, the assortment of objects served as a "metaphor pointing to the eclecticism of the Hudson Valley," [10] an area of diversity in the natural environment and the human, social and civic environment.

Pritzker's work continues her interest in human interaction with nature. Her project, the "Selknam Series," referenced the indigenous people of southern Argentina and Chile, and is an "investigation, research and visual homage to a rich and deep civilization that is now totally extinct. I have always questioned humanity's ancestral and ongoing violence towards other cultures. Honoring the Selknam is a reminder that there are still many inhuman acts everywhere." [11] This series was also part of the International Art Biennale Fresh Winds exhibition in Gardur, Iceland from December 2015 to January 2016. [12] [13] Pritzker exhibited "Selknam: Spirit, Ceremony, Selves" at the Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art (HVCCA) Museum from May to September 2017 [14] [15] [16] and the Gallery of the Consulate General of Argentina in New York in October 2017. [17]

In addition to her work as an artist, Pritzker is active as a curator. [18] She is also the co-founder of HCC-Arts and has been recognized for her work with that organization. [19] Her interviews and work have appeared in magazines, such as Poets and Artists, [20] on PBS, [21] and on radio. [22] Pritzer also is the author of a syndicated column, "La Esquina de las Artes" (The Corner of the Arts), published in La Voz at Bard College and ABClatino magazine. [23] [24]

Exhibitions and collections

Pritzker has exhibited extensively in the United States and abroad, in group and solo exhibitions, including such notable New York City venues as the Museum of Modern Art, the Cork Gallery at Lincoln Center Plaza, Franklin 54 Gallery, the Pinta Art Fair, Brooklyn's NurtureArt, and the Sculpture Center in Long Island City, Queens. Her New York State exhibition venues include the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art (SDMA), [25] the Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Arts [HVCCA], the Kingston Museum of Contemporary Arts (KMOCA) [26] [27] and in various venues in the Hudson Valley. [28] [29] Internationally, Pritzker's work has been exhibited at the National Institute of Art in Taipei, Taiwan; the Naxos Town Hall, Naxos, Greece; the London Biennial/Gallery 32, London, U.K.; Galeria de Arte Buenos Aires Sur and Galeria Arte x Arte, both in Buenos Aires, Argentina; Taste Modern Berlin Art Gallery, Berlin, Germany; Casa Argentina, Jerusalem, Israel; and others.

Her work is represented in significant collections in New York and abroad, including Dia Beacon, Beacon, New York; the Brooklyn Art Library, Brooklyn, New York; the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art, New Paltz, New York; [30] [31] Jean et Colette Cherqui Art Collection, Paris, France & New York; Consulate General of Argentina in New York; Buenos Aires' Galeria de Arte Vuelvo al Sur and Fundacion Luz y Alfonso Castillo; and in private collections in the United States, London, Germany and Israel.

Awards and honors

Pritzker has been the recipient of numerous awards, including two Congressional Awards by US Congressman Maurice Hinchey for achievements and service in the area of Community Arts and Culture; a National Black Prestige Award; a J.P. Morgan Chase, Working Woman honoree; and several others. [32] She has also been awarded several grants, including the S.O.S. Grant from the New York State Council on the Arts and the New York Foundation for the Arts; a Puffin Foundation Grant, among others. [3]

Pritzker was the U.S. representative artist invited to the international art project, "The Pyramids of Naxos", focused on the environment and waste presented during the 2004 Olympics in Greece. [33] In January 2018, she was the featured artist in Sanctuary magazine. [34]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">State University of New York at New Paltz</span> Public university in New Paltz, New York

The State University of New York at New Paltz is a public university in New Paltz, New York. It traces its origins to the New Paltz Classical School, a secondary institution founded in 1828 and reorganized as an academy in 1833.

Roberto Azank is an artist of the late 20th century and early 21st century, known primarily for his work as a still life painter. He was born in Buenos Aires, Argentina in 1955; the grandson of an oil canvas artist and the son of a master embroidery designer.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lesley Dill</span> American artist

Lesley Dill is an American contemporary artist. Her work, using a wide variety of media including sculpture, print, performance art, music, and others, explores the power of language and the mystical nature of the psyche. Dill currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George Quasha</span> American artist and poet (born 1942)

George Quasha is an American artist and poet who works across media, exploring language, sculpture, drawing, video art, sound and music, installation, and performance. He lives and works in Barrytown, New York.

Gregory William Frux is a traditional realist artist, working mainly in the landscape genre. His oil paintings document both New York’s cityscapes and wilderness locations in North and South America.

Eugene Ludins was a leading regional American painter and academic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mary Reid Kelley</span>

Mary Reid Kelley is an American artist based in upstate New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Linda Weintraub</span>

Linda Weintraub is an American art writer, educator and curator. She has written several books on contemporary art. Her most recent works address environmental consciousness that defines the ways cultures approach art, science, ethics, philosophy, politics, manufacturing, and architecture.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Charles Rosen (painter)</span> American painter

Charles Rosen was an American painter who lived for many years in Woodstock, New York. In the 1910s he was acclaimed for his Impressionist winter landscapes. He became dissatisfied with this style and around 1920 he changed to a radically different cubist-realist (Precisionism) style. He became recognized as one of the leaders of the Woodstock artists colony.

Adriana Farmiga is an American visual artist, curator, and professor based in New York City. She serves as a programming advisor for the non-profit La Mama Gallery in the East Village, and is the current Associate Dean at Cooper Union School of Art.

Lauren Fensterstock is an American artist, writer, curator, critic, and educator living and working in Portland, Maine. Fensterstock’s work has been widely shown nationally at venues such as the John Michael Kohler Art Center (WI), the Bowdoin College Museum of Art (ME), the Portland Museum of Art (ME), and is held in public and private collections throughout the U.S, Europe, and Asia.

Jamie Bennett is an American artist and educator known for his enamel jewelry. Over his forty-year career, Bennett has experimented with the centuries-old process of enameling, discovered new techniques of setting, and created new colors of enamel and a matte surfaces. This has led him to be referred to as “one of the most innovative and accomplished enamellers of our time” by Ursula Ilse-Neuman, historian and former curator at the Museum of Art and Design in New York City. Bennett is closely associated with the State University of New York at New Paltz, where he studied himself as a student, and taught in the Metal department for many years. Bennett retired from teaching in 2014, after thirty years at SUNY New Paltz.

Myra Mimlitsch-Gray is an American metalsmith, artist, critic, and educator living and working in Stone Ridge, New York. Mimlitsch-Gray's work has been shown nationally at such venues as the John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Museum of the City of New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Cooper-Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum, and Museum of Arts and Design. Her work has shown internationally at such venues as the Middlesbrough Institute of Modern Art, Stadtisches Museum Gottingen, and the Victoria and Albert Museum, and is held in public and private collections in the U.S, Europe, and Asia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Raquel Rabinovich</span> Argentine-American artist (born 1929)

Raquel Rabinovich is an Argentine-American artist. She is known for her monochromatic paintings and drawings as well as for her large-scale glass sculpture environments and site-specific installations along the shores of the Hudson River. She is included in the Oral History Program of the Smithsonian Institution Archives of American Art. Her work is included in numerous museum collections, including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.

Andrew Lyght is a contemporary artist living in Kingston, New York. Lyght is a mixed media artist, often combining drawings, painterly elements, industrial objects, and sculptural wooden assemblages.

Marco DaSilva is Brazilian-American multimedia artist, primary working in painting and drawing. His work integrates a personal symbology amidst explorations of his multi-racial, queer and manic experience.

Marcuse "Cusie" Pfeifer was an American gallerist. Pfeifer was an important person in recognition of photography as a fine art, founding member and art exhibition director of the Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center in Kingston, New York, and a supporter of the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art. She opened the Marcuse Pfeifer Gallery on Madison Avenue in 1976, and later moved to 568 Broadway. She helped people, including Sally Mann, Peter Hujar, and Timothy Greenfield-Sanders to launch their careers as contemporary photographers. In 1978, she curated a show of male nudes, with work by Robert Maplethorpe, Lynn Davis and Peter Hujar, prompting The New York Times reviewer to call for a return to "old-fashioned prudery".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">George Wexler</span> American painter

George Wexler was a 20th-century American painter of realist landscapes. His work most frequently depicted scenes of mountains, woodlands, rivers and farmland in the Hudson Valley north of New York City but also included locales in the U.S. west coast and Hawaii. His earliest landscapes were influenced by the French painter Paul Cézanne, but later work became increasingly detailed and naturalistic.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Karina Aguilera Skvirsky</span> Latin American Woman Artist

Karina Aguilera Skvirsky is a multidisciplinary artist based in New York, New York. Her work is held in the permanent collections of the Brooklyn Museum, the New York Public Library, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Whitney Museum, among others. Working across video, performance, and photography, Aguilera Skvirsky addresses themes of migration, colonization, Latin American identity, and family history. Aguilera Skvirsky is best known for her performance video The Perilous Journey of María Rosa Palacios (2019).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Benjamin Leroy Wigfall</span> American artist (1930-2017

Benjamin Leroy Wigfall (1930–2017) was an American abstract-expressionist painter, printmaker, teacher, gallery owner, and collector of African art. He was the founder of a community art space called Communications Village as a hub for residents in a Black neighborhood in Kingston, New York. At the age of 20, he was the youngest artist ever to have a painting purchased by the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts.

References

  1. "On the Cover: Elisa Pritzker" Chronogram. Retrieved 2015-4-19.
  2. George, Patrick A. "Mandala: Buddhist Tantric Diagrams" University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 2014-4-21.
  3. 1 2 3 4 "Elisa Pritzker". Elisa Pritzker.
  4. "Going Gaga for Gaudí in Highland" Chronogram. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
  5. Mahoney, Brian K. (February 2009)"Parting Shot" and "Editorial" Chronogram. Retrieved 2015-4-21.
  6. Mahoney, Brian K. "Parting Shot Chronogram Magazine. February 2009. Retrieved 2015-4-19.
  7. George, Patrick, A. "Mandala: Buddhist Tantric Diagrams University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 2015-4-19.
  8. "Chronogram Cover Film July 2014" via www.youtube.com.
  9. Garner, Dwight. "Draw It With Your Eyes Closed New York Times. March 2013. Retrieved 2015-4-19.
  10. "Peekskill Project V" Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, March 2103.
  11. "Elisa Pritzker" Archived April 16, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Selknam, Kingston Museum of Contemporary Art, Arte al Limite, March 2015.
  12. "¿Qué cocinaré hoy? : Elisa Pritzker, Elena Uriarte Black" WGXC. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
  13. "Elisa Pritzer" Catalog Fresh Winds 2016. Retrieved 2016-07-10.
  14. Maidman, Daniel. "Magical Objects" HuffPo. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  15. "Selknam: Look Back to Look Forward" HVCCA. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  16. "Elisa Pritzker and her New York-based marplatense art to the world" Un Lugar en el Mundo. Retrieved 2017-05-23.
  17. "Exhibition of Elisa Pritzker and Alejandro Lucas Debonis" ViceVersa. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  18. Marston-Reid, Linda. "Peace & Justice Invokes Myriad Artists' Interpretations" Poughkeepsie Journal. March 12, 2015.
  19. "Pride of Ulster County Award" Ulster County Services. Retrieved 2015-4-19.
  20. "Devotion" Poets and Artists. Retrieved 2016-07-24.
  21. "Aha!" WMHT. Retrieved 2016-07-24.
  22. "At La Voz, Thursdays are for Entertainment and the Environment" Radio Kingston. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  23. "All Articles by Elisa Pritzker" La Voz. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  24. "Looking for the visible and representing the invisible" ABClatino. Retrieved 2018-04-13.
  25. "Past Exhibitions" State University of New York/New Paltz. News Hub. Retrieved 2015-4-21.
  26. "Exhibit openings" Times Herald-Record. Retrieved 2015-4-19.
  27. "Find your weekend fun in our events calendar" Poughkeepsie Journal. Retrieved 2015-4-19.
  28. "‘Meeting Past’ exhibited at Akin Museum in Pawling" Poughkeepsie Journal. Retrieved 2014-4-19.
  29. "Find weekend fun in our events calendar" Poughkeepsie Journal. Retrieved 2014-4-19.
  30. "Dorsky Museum announces programs for Dear Mother Nature, Hudson Valley Artists 2012" State University of New York/New Paltz. News Hub. Retrieved 2015-4-21.
  31. "The Dorsky Museum announces 2012 Hudson Valley Artists Purchase Award recipients" State University of New York/New Paltz. News Hub. Retrieved 2015-4-21.
  32. "New and Notable in the Mid-Hudson Valley: Feb. 15, 2015" Daily Freeman. Retrieved 2015-07-24.
  33. "The Pyramids of Naxos!" Art Daily. Retrieved 2015-4-21.
  34. "Featured Artist" Sanctuary Magazine. Retrieved 2018-04-13.