Gwyneth Leech

Last updated

Gwyneth Leech is an American artist. She is best known for her use of paper coffee cups as a canvas for her artistic pieces [1] [2] and for her paintings of high-rise construction projects. [3] [4]

Contents

Career

Leech began drawing on empty paper coffee cups during meetings in 2007 and became interested in creating on the curved cup surface and the endless supply of such a canvas. She first exhibited cups in 2011 as an installation in the NYC Fashion Center's Window Space for Public Art in the Garment District. Her physical presence while working in the window was a significant part of the project. [5]

In the fall of 2011, the cup project transferred to the Flatiron Prow Artspace, 23rd Street and Broadway, in New York City. Leech was in residence working in public five days a week from September 2011 to February 2012, resulting in a final collection of 850 drawings and paintings on her used coffee cups. In 2012, "Drawings 1–655" were included in the "Luxuriant Refuse" exhibit at the Pearl Fincher Museum of Fine Art located in Spring, Texas. In September 2013, "365: A Year in Cups", a window installation for Anthropologie Regent Street, was featured in the London Design Festival. [6] [7]

Leech has since created site-specific installations for City Without Walls Gallery in Newark, New Jersey, and in NYC for No Longer Empty, Westbeth Gallery, Hewitt Gallery at Marymount Manhattan College and for the Susan Teller Gallery. Her largest cup installation so far has been "1001 Cup Stories", which was shown at the Harris Building in Grand Rapids, Michigan, for ArtPrize 2014 and was voted in the top 10 art installations. [8]

Leech has explored different ideas about public drawing including drawing in public view, drawing with the public, and getting the public to draw, often in venues outside the traditional gallery and museum environment. [9] She first drew in the public eye as part of Shiku Haku, a theater piece with Indalo Arts at La MaMa Theatre Club in 2000. [10] In 2010, using the theme of family, she explored getting the public to draw in projects for the Pool Art Fair and for Figment's summer festival on Governor's Island in NYC.

In 2015, the construction of a 42-floor building began outside Leech’s studio window on West 39th Street in New York City. Instead of moving, she decided to create paintings of the process as the new building was constructed. [11] [12] Since then, Leech has been documenting skyscraping building projects including Hudson Yards, Billionaires' Row on West 57th Street, the new Museum of Modern Art tower on 53rd Street, and One Vanderbilt next to Grand Central Terminal.

Leech’s construction series is the subject of an award-winning short documentary by film-maker Angelo Guglielmo, The Monolith. [13] [14] [15] Her construction site paintings have been showcased at Sciame headquarters in New York City (2016), in the Kaufman Arcade Space for Public Art in New York City (2018), at the Clinton/Hell’s Kitchen Studio Gallery in New York City (2019), and in gallery group shows in New Jersey and Massachusetts (2018).

Her prior projects include a series of alternative family portraits in oils called Perfect Families. It was first shown at Franklin 54 Gallery in New York City in October 2006 and traveled to the Southwest Minnesota State University Art Museum in January 2007. The paintings were then exhibited in a number of community venues in New York City including the Hudson Guild (2007), New York Public Library Columbus Branch (2009), First Presbyterian Church (2010) and at Stapeley in Germantown, a senior residence in Philadelphia (2010). A selection of the portraits was included in "All in the Family" at the Islip Art Museum, also in 2010. [16]

Awards and grants

Leech is the recipient of awards and grants including a Hell's Kitchen Foundation Grant, a Glasgow District Council's European Capital of Culture Project Grant, [17] Scottish Arts Council Time Based Media Award, University of Colorado's President's Fund Grant, an Elizabeth Greenshields Memorial Award and a Thouron Fellowship. [18] [19] First artist-in-residence with Scottish Opera (1990).

Background

Leech received a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, [20] and a Bachelor of Fine Arts and Post Graduate DA from Edinburgh College of Art in Scotland. [21]

She is the granddaughter of Pennsylvania artist and printmaker Michael J. Gallagher and a niece of the choreographer Martha Wittman. [22] [23]

Leech resides in New York City.

Related Research Articles

Inka Essenhigh 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, Tomio Koyama Gallery in Tokyo, and Il Capricorno in Venice.

Cliff Eyland was a Canadian painter, writer and curator.

Whitney Museum of American Art (original building) United States historic place

The Whitney Museum of American Art original building is a collection of three 1838 rowhouses located at 8–12 West 8th Street between Fifth Avenue and MacDougal Street in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City. In 1907, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney established the Whitney Studio Gallery at 8 West 8th Street adjacent to her own MacDougal Alley studio. This, and the later Whitney Studio Club at 147 West 4th Street, were intended to provide young artists with places to meet and exhibit their works.

Barbara Rosenthal American photographer, novelist, diarist, poet

Barbara Ann Rosenthal is an American avant-garde artist, writer and performer. Her existential themes have contributed to contemporary art and philosophy. Her pseudonyms include "Homo Futurus," taken from the title of one of her books and "Cassandra-on-the-Hudson," which alludes to "the dangerous world she envisions" while creating art in her studio and residence, located since 1998 on the Hudson River in Greenwich Village, NYC.

Heather Hart American visual artist, Co-Founder of The Black Lunch Table Project

Heather T. Hart is a visual artist who works in a variety of media including interactive and participatory Installation art, drawing, collage, and painting. She is a co-founder of the Black Lunch Table Project, which includes a Wikipedia initiative focused on addressing gender gap and diversity representation in the arts on Wikipedia.

Colette Justine

Colette Justine better known as Colette and from 2001 Colette Lumiere is a Tunisian-born, American multimedia artist known for her pioneering work in performance art, street art and her use of photography to create photographic tableau vivant. She is also known for her work exploring male and female gender roles, use of guises and personas, and for soft fabric environments where she often appears as the central element.

Ezio Martinelli American painter

Ezio Martinelli was an American artist who belonged to the New York School Abstract Expressionist artists, a leading art movement of the post-World War II era.

Buck House was a gallery on Madison Avenue in the Carnegie Hill neighborhood of Manhattan’s Upper East Side. The gallery opened in November 2001 and was owned and operated by artist Deborah Buck.

Tom Christopher American painter (born 1952)

Tom Christopher is an American painter known for his expressionist urban paintings and murals, mostly of New York City. Christopher began as a commercial artist, and has become a painter with worldwide galleries and exhibitions.

Les Lalanne is the term for the French artist team of François-Xavier Lalanne (1927–2008) and Claude Lalanne (1924–2019).

Linn Meyers

Linn Meyers is an American, Washington, D.C.–based artist. Her work has been exhibited in the United States and abroad. She is known for her hand-drawn lines and tracings for site-specific installations.

Mary Miss American environmental artist (born 1944)

Mary Miss is an American artist and designer. Her work has crossed boundaries between architecture, landscape architecture, engineering and urban design. Her installations are collaborative in nature: she has worked with scientists, historians, designers, and public administrators. She is primarily interested in how to engage the public in decoding their surrounding environment.

Eva Moll is a German contemporary artist. Moll works in the media fine art printmaking, drawing and painting and its expansion in the areas of performance art and conceptual art. Beside works on canvas and paper; Happening, video art and installation count to her Œuvre. A large part of her work stands in the traditions of appropriation art, pop art, fluxus and action painting. She lives and works in New York and Berlin.

Marion Wilson is an American artist whose mixed media installations have gained critical attention.

Mary Valverde is a Queens-born Latina artist who lives, works, and teaches in New York. She is a cultural practitioner who is invested in ritual, the quotidian, and syncretic relationships rooted in a basis of research and socially implicit trans-physics. Valverde has served on the Public Design Commission of the City of New York since 2015.

Amanda Browder American installation artist

Amanda Browder is an American installation artist known for her large-scale fabric installations on building exteriors and other public sites. Her work incorporates donated materials and local volunteers, creating site-specific art. She is the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, and Transformation Fellowship from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV).

Elyn Zimmerman American sculptor

Elyn Zimmerman is an American sculptor known for her emphasis on large scale, site specific projects and environmental art. Along with these works, Zimmerman has exhibited drawings and photographs since graduating with an MFA in painting and photography at University of California, Los Angeles in 1972. Her teachers included Robert Heineken, Robert Irwin, and Richard Diebenkorn.

Roberta Allen is a conceptual artist and fiction writer. Her interest in language is the bridge that connects these separate pursuits. As a conceptual artist who combines images and text, she explores how language changes or informs our perception of images. Her works have included drawings, artist books, photo/text works, installations, digital prints, and sculpture. Her works in the early 1970s were inspired by Kierkegaard’s belief that our deepest experiences occur in the form of contradictions and wherever there is contradiction humor is present. Through the 1970s, she exhibited alongside Sol LeWitt, Robert Ryman and Carl Andre, among others, at John Weber Gallery in New York. In her writing, which includes, among other books, three micro and short story collections, a novel, a novella and a travel memoir, Allen questions the way we perceive the world and the self. Truths are relative and may change in a flash. The way our minds work and specifically the act of relating is her main subject. She presents disturbing views of the human scene which are often relieved by humor.

Torkwase Dyson is an interdisciplinary artist based in Brooklyn, New York, United States. Her work has been exhibited at the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Corcoran College of Art and Design, and the Smithsonian National Museum of African Art. She describes the themes of her work as "architecture, infrastructure, environmental justice, and abstract drawing." In 1999 she received a BFA from Virginia Commonwealth University and her MFA from Yale School of Art in painting/printmaking in 2003. In 2016, Dyson was elected to the board of the Architectural League of New York as Vice President of Visual Arts. In 2017, she was on the faculty of the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. She is a visiting critic at Yale School of Art.

Elke Solomon is an artist, curator, educator and community worker. She is known for her interdisciplinary practice that combines painting, drawing, object-making, performance and installation. She has exhibited widely in the United States and abroad.

References

  1. "An Art Exhibit That’s Good to the Last Drop" The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  2. "Cambridge Anthropologie Hosts Live Art Exhibition with Gwyneth Leech" Boston Magazine. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  3. "Documenting the New Towers of Old Hell’s Kitchen" Village Voice. Retrieved 2020-05-15.
  4. "Meet Gwyneth Leech, the Artist that Beautifully Paints NYC Construction Sites" CityRealty. Retrieved 2020-05-15.
  5. "Do What You Love, Money Follows: The Coffee Cup Artist" Psychology Today. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  6. "Cup Dairies" Azure. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  7. "London Design Festival events in the spotlight" Financial Times. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  8. "Why Forbes praises ArtPrize for making Grand Rapids 'a more interesting place to live'" Michigan Live. Retrieved 2015-09-24.
  9. "Drink Up" American Craft Magazine. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  10. "DANCE REVIEW; Suffering And Rebirth Dramatized By Flamenco" The New York Times. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  11. "MUST-SEE: 10-Minute Documentary The Monolith Beautifully Captures the Art of Gwyneth Leech" Good Life Detroit. Retrieved 2020-05-15.
  12. "An Intrepid Radio Host Takes To The Streets Of New York In ONE OCTOBER" Broadway World. Retrieved 2020-05-15.
  13. "‘The Woman Who Wasn’t There’ Filmmaker Directs ‘Monolith’ – WATCH" Deadline. Retrieved 2020-05-15.
  14. "The Monolith: Artist Gwyneth Leech Turns the Destructive Force of a New Building Into a Source of Inspiration" Colossal. Retrieved 2020-05-15.
  15. "The Monolith: An Interview with Film Director Angelo J. Guglielmo, Jr., Editor Rosie Walunas and Artist Gwyneth Leech" Artdependence. Retrieved 2020-05-15.
  16. "Full Brew & View" Hand Eye. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  17. "Linking art and architecture" Glasgow Herald. Retrieved 2015-09-24.
  18. "Cross Connections" Pennsylvania Gazette. Retrieved 2015-09-24.
  19. "Alumni News" Thouron Award. Retrieved 2015-09-24.
  20. "Cup O'Doodles" Pennsylvania Gazette. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  21. "Gwyneth Leech: the art of paper cups" The Telegraph. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  22. "Spanning three generations, a family's art on view in separate Norwalk galleries" The Hour. Retrieved 2015-9-24.
  23. "Performance and gallery exhibition" Archived September 25, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Penn State – Altoona. Retrieved 2015-9-24.