Gina Beavers

Last updated
Gina Beavers
Born1974 (age 4849)
Athens, Greece
NationalityAmerican
Education University of Virginia, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Brooklyn College
Known forPainting, drawing
Website Gina Beavers
Gina Beavers, Applebees!, acrylic on canvas, 20" x 16" x 3", 2012. Gina Beavers Applebees! 2012.jpg
Gina Beavers, Applebees!, acrylic on canvas, 20" x 16" x 3", 2012.

Gina Beavers (born 1974) is an American artist based in the New York area. [1] She first gained attention in the early 2010s for thickly painted, relief-like acrylic images of food, cosmetics techniques and bodybuilders appropriated from Instagram snapshots and selfies found using hashtags such as #foodporn, #sixpack and #makeuptutorial. [2] [3] Her later work has continued to recombine these recurrent subjects, as well as explore memes, irreverent conflations of genres or art history and kitsch, identity, fandom and celebrity-worship. [4] [5] [6] [7] In 2019, New York Times critic Martha Schwendener described her paintings as "canny statements on contemporary bodies, beauty and culture … [that] tackle the weirdness of immaterial images floating through the ether, building them up into something monumental, rather than dismissing them." [8]

Contents

Beavers has exhibited at institutions including MoMA PS1, [9] [8] the Frans Hals Museum (Netherlands), [10] Nassau County Museum of Art and KMAC Contemporary Art Museum. [11] Her work belongs to the public collections of the Whitney Museum, [12] Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, [13] and Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, [14] among others. She lives and works in Orange, New Jersey. [15]

Early life and career

Beavers was born in 1974 in Athens, Greece into a diplomatic family and grew up moving between Europe and the US. [15] [16] [17] She attended the University of Virginia and received a BA in studio art and anthropology in 1996. [18] She initially painted in a cartoonish, narrative vein, but turned to hard-edge abstraction in graduate school at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she earned an MFA in painting and drawing in 2000. [16] [18] After moving to New York City, she got an MS in art education from Brooklyn College in 2005 and taught art at a Brooklyn K–8 school for twelve years until 2015. [2] [16]

By 2010, Beavers had begun experimenting with ways to incorporate a sculpted, handmade element into her work and turned to the internet and social media as sources of imagery. [15] [16] This new work brought her early critical attention through group shows in and around New York City [19] [20] and solo exhibitions at James Fuentes Gallery and Clifton Benevento in New York, [19] [21] among others. [22] Her inclusion in the 2015 MoMA PS1 "Greater New York" show increased this level of public recognition. [23] [9]

In subsequent years, Beavers has had solo exhibitions at Michael Benevento Gallery (Los Angeles), [7] [24] GNYP Gallery (Berlin), [25] Carl Kostyál Gallery (London and Stockholm), [5] MoMA PS1 (the 2019 survey, "The Life I Deserve") [26] and Marianne Boesky Gallery (New York), [27] [4] Various Small Fires (Seoul), [28] and Neuer Essener Kunstverein (Germany). She has also appeared in group exhibitions at the FLAG Art Foundation, [29] Gavin Brown's Enterprise [30] and Frans Hals Museum, among others. [10]

Work and reception

Beavers's work is frequently regarded as being two-fold in nature: concerned both with fetish-like social media preoccupations involving the body and identity and with painting itself as a subject—its cultural status, unique qualities and limitations. [2] [31] [17] [32]

Gina Beavers, Doll Lips, acrylic on linen on panel, 48" x 48" x 9", 2021. Gina Beavers Doll Lips 2021.jpg
Gina Beavers, Doll Lips, acrylic on linen on panel, 48" x 48" x 9", 2021.

Beavers bases her paintings on snapshots from social media subgenres that embody contemporary modes of consumption and desire defined by excess and differentiation: "food porn," makeup tutorials, body painting and bodybuilder selfies. [3] [17] [1] Critics have likened her position toward this subject matter (and her own output) as that "of a disinterested anthropologist" [2] situated between fascination and critique. [32] [7] Her work engages the power of "high" and "low" cultural images and their effects on selfhood, offering uncanny or unsettling visions of digitally mediated life marked by a mix of shamelessness and self-abasement. [2] [1] [32] She often blurs categories and genres in mashups of art history, kitsch and the body, for example, the painting Starry Night by Vincent van Gogh as rendered in Bacon (2016), grotesque image combinations (burgers and vaginas, cake and butt cheek), or pats of paint on a palette formed into cupcakes. [1] [32] [30] Frieze's Jonathan Griffin observed, "In Beavers’s paintings, the body is often conflated with the artwork, soliciting the gaze of others but also anxious to control it or deflect it through illusion." [2]

Beavers re-endows ephemeral digital images with sculptural heft and tactility built by piling dense accumulations of acrylic paint and medium, foam and other materials. [2] [33] [5] Critics connect this emphasis on materiality and the body to painterly, carnal traditions of oil painting extending back to artists such as Goya and Titian, as well as to more unruly, embodied aspects of Pop art. [34] [31] [21] They suggest that her translations of digital imagery subject them to the logic of painting, introducing notions of singularity and temporality while divesting them of inherent qualities such as similarity, ubiquity and reproducibility. [6] [5] [17]

The discrepancy between Beavers's bulging, rough matte forms and their often-slick screen-based sources highlights the gap between digital exemplars and messier, physical lives. [1] [31] [21] Furthermore, her paintings often undermine the original intent of snapshots to be appetizing, appealing or sexy, [2] rendering them as "repulsive and alluring," [1] and "enticing and abject" [3] according to reviewers. [32] [33] [35] In a similar way, Beaver's painting technique calls into question (mostly male) painting traditions, even as it invokes them. She uses acrylic paint—associated with modern flatness and matte texture as opposed to oil's richness— and paints in an intentionally clumsy manner with thick, relief-like protrusions that rejects both mastery and illusionistic depth. [34] [5]

Early solo exhibitions

The expressive, impasto acrylic paintings in Beavers's first two solo exhibitions in 2012 were grounded in awkward, social-media photographs involving bodybuilding and body painting, with titles frequently derived from captions or comments that originally accompanied them. [22] [2] [1] She recreated them as jarring, close-up reliefs of grotesquely muscled male torsos, bulging female breasts and bodies covered with images of animals or art-historical motifs (Gator or Mondrian, both 2012) that Andrew Russeth characterized as "meaty paintings with pleasantly creepy volume." [31] [19]

In her exhibition of the same year, "Palate" (the title a homophone for "palette"), she turned to small, low-relief works based on online food photography. [36] [31] The depictions ranging from marbled meat, oysters and shellfish to less exalted offerings (e.g., Food Porn! (Chicken & Waffles) and Applebees!, 2012) and employed unorthodox materials (pumice stone, glass beads) to better capture the textures of foods like pie crust or dipping sauce. [21] [2] New York Times critic Roberta Smith wrote that Beavers "exaggerated and satirized both the act of painting and the fetishization of food by professional photographers and hungry diners … captur[ing] certain extremes of indulgence that verge on gross." [31] She and others connected the paintings (e.g., Red Velvet Cake) back to the messy sensuality of earlier work, such as Carolee Schneemann's Meat Joy (1964), Claes Oldenburg's anthropomorphic Store (1961), Red Grooms's painted sculptures and Photorealism. [31] [21]

Gina Beavers, American Flag Sponge Butt Cake, acrylic on linen on panel, 48" x 48" x 4", 2020. Gina Beavers American Flag Sponge Butt Cake 2020.jpeg
Gina Beavers, American Flag Sponge Butt Cake, acrylic on linen on panel, 48" x 48" x 4", 2020.

Beavers returned to the body in the exhibitions "Re-Animator" (2014) and "Popography" (2015) with mostly square, often gridded paintings that matched typical formats of Instagram. [6] [7] In subject matter, they focused on cosmetics how-tos for "sun-kissed lips" and "smoky eye" (Maquillaje (Make-up), 2015) or straight-on, tightly cropped facial features (Who Has Braces, 2014). [6] [7] [2] Los Angeles Times critic Sharon Mizota suggested that the thickly built, sticky accretions undid the gloss and sense of effortless glamour of their digital sources, operating "somewhere between critique and affection" and aesthetic and didactic objects to "cinematic and thoroughly surreal" effect. [7] Artforum described them as "less pictorial than topographic" nature morte objects that positioned "paint's materiality as a metonym for that of the body's, making the latter seem cadaverous by comparison," as in Crotch Shots from the Getty Villa (2014), a five-part grid of Greco-Roman genitalia snapped from museum statuary. [6]

Later work

In later shows, Beavers has introduced new subjects alongside recurrent ones. The exhibition "Ambitchous" (2017) juxtaposed makeup tutorial images with carnivalesque instructions for dressing up as cartoon characters such as Cruella de Vil and Elsa from the film Frozen (2013); reviews noted in the work and show's portmanteau title a contemporary attitude positioned ambiguously between female self-affirmation and ruthlessness. [25] In "Tennis Ball Yellow" (2017), Beavers presented large-scale relief paintings of papier-mâché -formed paintboxes and sports balls that popped out from light-pink canvases lined like sports fields and pouting grass-green lips (Lip Balls, 2017). [5] The show also included four-sided square paintings on plinth-like cubes that offered multiple viewing angles of their protruding forms. [5]

In subsequent shows, such as "World War Me" (2020), Beavers examined identity and the ubiquitous presence of the female face and body in art and advertising through the lens of a fractured social-media self-consciousness craving recognition and popularity. [15] [4] [37] Her boldly painted reliefs depicted enlarged, often repeating features (lips, hands, fake nails), faces and torsos in bikini underwear flaunting art-historical (Van Gogh, Picasso, Mondrian and others) and consumer culture motifs. [18] Roberta Smith wrote, "These works conflate all kinds of self-improvement and adornment projects: makeup, tattoos, cosmetic surgery and nail art as well as fandom and celebrity-worship. Their blaring billboard power from afar is countered by a squirm-worthy intimacy up close." [4] [15]

For the Seoul exhibition, "Passionaries" (2021), Beavers infused typical subjects with local flavor in Korean Fried Chicken and several Parasite -themed works that referenced the 2019 film by Korean director Bong Joon-ho. [28] She presented "Pastel Looks" in 2022, a show of flat pastel drawings that reviewers noted still managed to convey her characteristic sense of depth. [38] The drawings focused on grids of lipstick tutorials and nail and food images, such as the humorous Hot Dog Nails Drawing (2022), which portrayed a hand with hot dog-decorated fingernails. [38]

Collections

Beavers' work belongs to the public collections of the Institute of Contemporary Art Miami, [14] Kistefos Museum and Sculpture Park (Norway), Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, [13] Perez Art Museum Miami, Tel Aviv Museum of Art, and Whitney Museum. [12] [39] [40]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Nancy Graves</span> American painter

Nancy Graves was an American sculptor, painter, printmaker, and sometime-filmmaker known for her focus on natural phenomena like camels or maps of the Moon. Her works are included in many public collections, including those of the National Gallery of Art, the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the National Gallery of Australia (Canberra), the Des Moines Art Center, Walker Art Center (Minneapolis), and the Museum of Fine Arts. When Graves was just 29, she was given a solo exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art. At the time she was the youngest artist, and fifth woman to achieve this honor.

Dana Schutz is an American artist who lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. Schutz is known for her gestural, figurative paintings that often take on specific subjects or narrative situations as a point of departure.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Inka Essenhigh</span> American painter

Inka Essenhigh is an American painter based in New York City. Throughout her career, Essenhigh has had solo exhibitions at galleries such as Deitch Projects, Mary Boone Gallery, 303 Gallery, Stefan Stux Gallery, and Jacob Lewis Gallery in New York, Kotaro Nukaga, Tomio Koyama Gallery in Tokyo, and Il Capricorno in Venice.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amy Sillman</span> American painter

Amy Sillman is a New York-based visual artist, known for process-based paintings that move between abstraction and figuration, and engage nontraditional media including animation, zines and installation. Her work draws upon art historical tropes, particularly postwar American gestural painting, as both influences and foils; she engages feminist critiques of the discourses of mastery, genius and power in order to introduce qualities such as humor, awkwardness, self-deprecation, affect and doubt into her practice. Profiles in The New York Times, ARTnews, Frieze, and Interview, characterize Sillman as championing "the relevance of painting" and "a reinvigorated mode of abstraction reclaiming the potency of active brushwork and visible gestures." Critic Phyllis Tuchman described Sillman as "an inventive abstractionist" whose "messy, multivalent, lively" art "reframes long-held notions regarding the look and emotional character of abstraction."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lynda Benglis</span> American sculptor (born 1941)

Lynda Benglis is an American sculptor and visual artist known especially for her wax paintings and poured latex sculptures. She maintains residences in New York City, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Kastellorizo, Greece, and Ahmedabad, India.

Kay WalkingStick is a Native American landscape artist and a member of the Cherokee Nation. Her later landscape paintings, executed in oil paint on wood panels often include patterns based on Southwest American Indian rugs, pottery, and other artworks.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Arturo Herrera</span> Venezuelan visual artist (born 1959)

Arturo Herrera is a Venezuelan-born (1959), Berlin-based visual artist known for wide-ranging work that is rooted in the practice of collage. His colorful, often rhythmic art intertwines bits of pop iconography, gestural marks and nonrepresentational shapes using pictorial strategies of fragmentation, repetition, effacement and dislocation. The resulting imagery often balances between abstraction and figuration, detached from inherent narratives yet vaguely familiar. Critics suggest that this ambiguity engages memory, fantasy and a viewer's unconscious private interpretive schemes, evoking a multiplicity of references and readings. In 2020, Art in America writer Ara H. Merjian described Herrera's practice—which includes works on paper, paintings, reliefs, sculpture, public art and books—as "chameleonic as [it] is consistent," one that "breathes life into modernist collage, exploring the tensions between exactitude and spontaneity, placement and displacement."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Katy Schimert</span> American visual artist

Katy Schimert is an American artist known for exhibitions and installations that meld disparate media into cohesive formal and conceptual visual statements arising out of personal experience, myth and empirical knowledge. She interweaves elements of fine and decorative arts, figuration and abstraction in densely layered drawings and sculpture that together suggest elliptical narratives or unfolding, cosmic events. Curator Heidi Zuckerman wrote that Schimert is inspired by "the places where the organized and the chaotic intersect—the scientific and the mythic, the known and the unknown, and the real and the imagined … she creates work that exists where, through fantasy, truth and beauty meet."

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ellen Harvey</span> American-British conceptual artist

Ellen Harvey is an American-British conceptual artist known for her painting-based practice and site-specific works in installation, video, engraved mirrors, mosaic and glass. She frequently pairs traditional representational vocabularies and genres with seemingly antithetical postmodern strategies, such as institutional critique, appropriation, mapping and pastiche. Her work examines such themes as art as a mirror, interactions between built environment and landscape, ruins and the Picturesque aesthetic, and cultural and economic relationships between museums, artists and publics. Curator Henriette Huldisch writes of her work, "haunted as it is by the notion of art's ultimate futility, her paradoxical stake is in persistently testing art's possibility to do something in the world after all."

Jiha Moon is a contemporary artist who focuses on painting, printmaking, and sculptural ceramic objects. Born in Daegu, South Korea, Moon is currently based in Atlanta, Georgia.

Mary Corse is an American artist who lives and works in Topanga, California. Fascinated with perceptual phenomena and the idea that light itself can serve as both subject and material in art, Corse's practice can be seen as existing at an crossroads between American Abstract Expressionism and American Minimalism. She is often associated with the male-dominated Light and Space art movement of the 1960s, although her role has only been fully recognized in recent years. She is best known for her experimentation with radiant surfaces in minimalist painting, incorporating materials that reflect light such as glass microspheres. Corse initially attended University of California, Santa Barbara starting in 1963. She later moved on to study at Chouinard Art Institute, earning her B.F.A. in 1968.

Christina Ramberg was an American painter associated with the Chicago Imagists, a group of representational artists who attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in the late 1960s. The Imagists took their cues from Surrealism, Pop, and West Coast underground comic illustration, and were "enchanted with the abject status of sex in post-war America, particularly as writ on the female form." Ramberg is best known for her depictions of partial female bodies forced into submission by undergarments and imagined in odd, erotic predicaments.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sharon Gold</span> American painter

Sharon Gold is an American artist and associate professor of painting at Syracuse University. Gold's artwork has been installed at MoMA PS1, Dia Art Foundation, Carnegie Mellon University, Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University, Everson Museum of Art, and Princeton University Art Museum. She was a fellow at MacDowell Colony. Gold's work has been reviewed by Arthur Danto, Donald Kuspit, Ken Johnson, and Stephen Westfall in a variety of publications from Artforum to the New York Times, New York Magazine, Arts Magazine, Art News, and many others. She also taught at Princeton University, Pratt Institute, Virginia Commonwealth University, University of Texas at San Antonio, San Francisco Art Institute, and the Tyler School of Art. Gold received a National Endowment for the Arts fellowship and wrote for Re-View Magazine, M/E/A/N/I/N/G/S, and Artforum. Her artwork spans across minimalism, monochromatic abstraction, geometric abstraction, and representational painting and is conceptually informed by structuralism, existential formalism, and feminist theory.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Henry Taylor (artist)</span> American painter

Henry Taylor is an American artist and painter who lives and works in Los Angeles, California. He is best known for his acrylic paintings, mixed media sculptures, and installations.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dona Nelson</span> American painter (born 1947)

Dona Nelson is an American painter, best known for immersive, gestural, primarily abstract works employing unorthodox materials, processes and formats to disrupt conventional notions of painting and viewership. A 2014 New Yorker review observed, "Nelson gives notice that she will do anything, short of burning down her house to bully painting into freshly spluttering eloquence." Since 2002, long before it became a more common practice, Nelson has produced free-standing, double-sided paintings that create a more complex, conscious viewing experience. According to New York Times critic Roberta Smith, Nelson has dodged the burden of a "superficially consistent style," sustained by "an adventuresome emphasis on materials" and an athletic approach to process that builds on the work of Jackson Pollock. Writers in Art in America and Artforum credit her experimentation with influencing a younger generation of painters exploring unconventional techniques with renewed interest. Discussing one of Nelson's visceral, process-driven works, curator Klaus Kertess wrote, the paint-soaked "muslin is at once the tool, the medium, and the made."

Chie Fueki is a Japanese American painter. She has had an active career exhibiting her work in commercial galleries, and has been awarded a Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship. Fueki's intricate paintings combine influences from both Eastern and Western traditions. She currently lives and works in Beacon, New York.

Hannah Black is a British visual artist, critic, and writer. Her work spans video, text and performance. She is best known for her open letter written with Ciarán Finlayson and Tobi Haslett, The Tear Gas Biennial, criticizing co-chair of the board of the Whitney Museum, Warren Kanders, and his philanthropic endeavors. These are allegedly made possible through the sale of tear gas and other weapons via Safariland. The letter prompted artists to withdraw works from the 2019 Whitney Biennial.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joanna Pousette-Dart</span> American visual artist (born 1947)

Joanna Pousette-Dart is an American abstract artist, based in New York City. She is best known for her distinctive shaped-canvas paintings, which typically consist of two or three stacked, curved-edge planes whose arrangements—from slightly precarious to nested—convey a sense of momentary balance with the potential to rock, tilt or slip. She overlays the planes with meandering, variable arabesque lines that delineate interior shapes and contours, often echoing the curves of the supports. Her work draws on diverse inspirations, including the landscapes of the American Southwest, Islamic, Mozarabic and Catalan art, Chinese landscape painting and calligraphy, and Mayan art, as well as early and mid-20th-century modernism. Critic John Yau writes that her shaped canvasses explore "the meeting place between abstraction and landscape, quietly expanding on the work of predecessors", through a combination of personal geometry and linear structure that creates "a sense of constant and latent movement."

Anna Conway is an American visual artist based in New York City and known for enigmatic oil paintings that depict uneasy, absurdist moments descending on isolated, ordinary individuals. She combines a style identified as precise and methodical with detailed observation, "an air of surrealist suspension," and a narrative sense that critics characterize as elusive, metaphysical and "imbued with cinematic suggestion." Conway has exhibited nationally and internationally, including at MoMA PS1, the American Academy of Arts and Letters, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, University Art Museum at Albany, Fralin Museum of Art, and Collezione Maramotti (Italy), among other venues. She has been recognized with a Guggenheim Fellowship (2014), two Pollock-Krasner Foundation Awards, and the American Academy of Arts and Letters William L. Metcalf Award (2008).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Harriet Korman</span> American painter

Harriet Korman is an American abstract painter based in New York City, who first gained attention in the early 1970s. She is known for work that embraces improvisation and experimentation within a framework of self-imposed limitations that include simplicity of means, purity of color, and a strict rejection of allusion, illusion, naturalistic light and space, or other translations of reality. Writer John Yau describes Korman as "a pure abstract artist, one who doesn’t rely on a visual hook, cultural association, or anything that smacks of essentialization or the spiritual," a position he suggests few post-Warhol painters have taken. While Korman's work may suggest early twentieth-century abstraction, critics such as Roberta Smith locate its roots among a cohort of early-1970s women artists who sought to reinvent painting using strategies from Process Art, then most associated with sculpture, installation art and performance. Since the 1990s, critics and curators have championed this early work as unjustifiably neglected by a male-dominated 1970s art market and deserving of rediscovery.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Museum of Modern Art. Gina Beavers, The Life I Deserve, Exhibitions, 2019. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 Griffin, Jonathan. "Body Work: The relief paintings of Gina Beavers," Frieze, May 2016. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  3. 1 2 3 Shultz, Oliver. Gina Beavers, MoMA Magazine, July 18, 2019. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Smith, Roberta. "A Gallery Resurgence in Chelsea," The New York Times, October 8, 2020, p. C6. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Schaar, Elise. "Gina Beavers, Carl Kostyál," Artforum, February 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 Fiske, Courtney. "Gina Beavers," Artforum, September 2014. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  7. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Mizota, Sharon. "The meaning of makeup in the Instagram age: Artist Gina Beavers stripes away the gloss," Los Angeles Times, December 14, 2015. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  8. 1 2 Schwendener Martha. "What to See in New York Art Galleries this Week: Gina Beavers," The New York Times, August 14, 2019, p. C14. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  9. 1 2 Kitnick, Alex. " Greater New York, MoMA PS1," Artforum, January 2016. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  10. 1 2 Frans Hals Museum. "Image Power," Exhibitions, 2020. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  11. KMAC Museum. "Food Shelter Clothing," Exhibitions, 2015. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  12. 1 2 Whitney Museum of American Art. Gina Beavers, Artists. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  13. 1 2 Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. "MOCA Announces 2022 Acquisitions," News. January 31, 2023. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  14. 1 2 Institute of Contemporary Art Miami. Gina Beavers, Money Lips, 2018, Collection. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  15. 1 2 3 4 5 Mellin, Haley. "Gina Beavers Explores the Complexities of an Online Self," Garage, October 9, 2020. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  16. 1 2 3 4 Gnyp, Marta. "#artporn – Painting in the age of social media," Zoo Magazine, September 2016.
  17. 1 2 3 4 Blumenstein, Ellen. "The Structure of Enjoyment on Instagram," in Gina Beavers, Berlin: GNYP, 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  18. 1 2 3 Hauser, EJ. "Gina Beavers with EJ Hauser," The Brooklyn Rail, October 2020. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  19. 1 2 3 Russeth, Andrew. "The 15 Hottest Artists of the Summer," Gallerist NY, July 24, 2012.
  20. Smith, Roberta. "Draw Gym," The New York Times, September 26, 2013, p. C32. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  21. 1 2 3 4 5 Chamberlain, Colby. "Gina Beavers, Clifton Benevento," Artforum, February 2013, p. 246–47. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  22. 1 2 Smith, Matthew. "Le Sigh: Gina Beavers at Nudashank," New American Paintings, February 24, 2012.
  23. Saltz, Jerry. "Goulding the Lolly," New York Magazine, July 2016.
  24. Horst, Aaron. "Gina Beavers at Michael Benevento," Carla May 17, 2018.
  25. 1 2 Blumenstein, Ellen. "Ambitchous, GNYP Gallery in Berlin, Germany," Meer, March 18, 2017. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  26. Kent, Charlotte. "Gina Beavers: The Life I Deserve," The Brooklyn Rail, June 2019. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  27. Artforum. News, "Gina Beavers joins Marianne Boesky Gallery," July 26, 2019. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  28. 1 2 Chung, Hayoung. "Gina Beavers, Various Small Fires," Artforum, February 17, 2021. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  29. Flag Art Foundation. "Among Friends: Three Views of a Collection," Exhibitions, 2022. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  30. 1 2 Wolkoff, Julia. "Goulding the Lolly," Art in America, July 2016.
  31. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Smith, Roberta. "Gina Beavers: Palate," The New York Times, December 7, 2012, p. C28. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  32. 1 2 3 4 5 Herbert, Martin. "Made You Look," in Gina Beavers: All My Addictions, London/Stockholm/Milan: Carl Kostyál, 2022. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  33. 1 2 Fry, Naomi. "We Are All Kim: The Paintings of Gina Beavers," in Gina Beavers, Berlin: GNYP, 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  34. 1 2 Chamberlain, Colby. "Acrylic and the Painterly," in Gina Beavers, Berlin: GNYP, 2018. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  35. Cotter, Holland. "10 Galleries to Visit on the Lower East Side," The New York Times, April 17, 2015, p. C34. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  36. Scott, Andrea K. "Gina Beavers at Clifton Benevento," The New Yorker, December 8, 2012.
  37. McLean, Matthew. "The Art of the Feast: Understanding the Glorification of Gluttony," Frieze, October 4, 2021. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  38. 1 2 Laster, Paul. "6 Must-See Gallery Shows in July 2022," Galerie, July 5, 2022. Retrieved March 27, 2023.
  39. Exhibition A. Gina Beavers, Collections. Retrieved March 24, 2023.
  40. Felsberg, Kaylie. "Gina Beavers’s Sculptural Paintings Make Waves at Fairs and Auctions," Artsy, October 19, 2021. Retrieved March 24, 2023.