Harmony Hammond

Last updated
Harmony Hammond
Born (1944-02-08) February 8, 1944 (age 80)
MovementFeminist Art Movement (New York, early 1970s)
Website www.harmonyhammond.com

Harmony Hammond (born February 8, 1944) is an American artist, activist, curator, and writer. She was a prominent figure in the founding of the feminist art movement in 1970s New York. [1]

Contents

Early life and education

Harmony Hammond was born on February 8, 1944, in Hometown, Illinois. [2] At 17, Hammond attended Miliken University in Decatur, Illinois. Later, she moved to Minneapolis and enrolled at the University of Minnesota. [3] Hammond graduated with a B.A. of Arts in painting in 1967. [4] [5]

Career

Hammond and her husband moved to New York in 1969, just months after the Stonewall Riots. When Hammond found out she was pregnant with her daughter, she and her husband decided to part ways. [6] In 1973, Hammond came out as a lesbian. [7]

Harmony Hammond co-founded the A.I.R. Gallery in 1972; it was the first women's cooperative art gallery in New York. She also co-founded Heresies: A Feminist Publication of Art and Politics in 1976, co-edited issues #1, 3 and 9, and published articles in seven issues. [8] Heresies was founded by Heresies Collective, whose core group consisted of Joyce Kozloff, Miriam Schapiro, Joan Semmel, Lucy Lippard, Mary Beth Edelson, Nancy Spero, and Harmony Hammond. [9] She was an instructor at the New York Feminist Art Institute. [2]

Hammond curated A Lesbian Show in 1978 at 112 Greene Street Workshop, featuring works by lesbian artists. [10] [3] She was one of the featured artists in the "Great American Lesbian Art Show" at the Woman's Building in 1980. In 1981, Hammond curated and exhibited her work in Home Work: The Domestic Environment As Reflected in the Work of Women Artists, sponsored by the New York State Council of the Arts (NYSCA) and The Women's Hall of Fame, Seneca Falls, NY. [11] She also curated an exhibition in 1999 at Plan B Evolving Arts in Santa Fe titled Out West, bringing together 41 lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and two-spirit artists from the Southwest. [12]

Hammond authored her first book, Wrappings: Essays on Feminism, Art, and the Martial Arts, a corpus of her writings from 1973 to 1983 published by TSL Press, in 1984. [11] In 2000 she published Lesbian Art in America: A Contemporary History. [13] She is featured in two 2010 films on feminist art - The Heretics , directed by Joan Braderman which focuses on the founders of the magazines Heresies: A Feminist Publication of Art and Politics in 1976; and !Women Art Revolution , directed by Lynn Hershman Leeson. [5]

In 1984, she moved to New Mexico, [5] where she lives and works today. [1] As a tenured full professor, Hammond taught painting, combined media and graduate critiques at the University of Arizona in Tucson, from 1988 to 2005. [5] Hammond continues to teach workshops and writes, curates, and lectures on feminist, lesbian, and queer art. [14]

Works

The Meeting of Passion and Intellect (1981), an example of the artist's wrapped sculptures, at the National Gallery of Art in 2022 The Meeting of Passion and Intellect, 1981, Harmony Hammond.jpg
The Meeting of Passion and Intellect (1981), an example of the artist's wrapped sculptures, at the National Gallery of Art in 2022

In her art, Hammond asserts that traditionally feminine qualities are worthwhile artistic subjects and means for artistic creation. To this end, for example, she created sculptures in the early 1970s featuring swaths of fabric, a traditionally feminine material, as a primary material. There were four fabric series: Bags (1971), Presences (1972), Floorpieces (1973), and WrappedSculptures (1977-1984). [15] [5] Harmony Hammond's paintings themselves show how they were made and are almost all abstract. [14] In the 1990s Hammond primarily made mixed-media installations that incorporated a range of traditionally non-art materials (such as human hair and corrugated roofing) with traditional oil painting, and in the first decade of the 2000s, her focus was on making monochrome abstract paintings. [14] [16]

Presences

This was a series of works created in 1971–1972. [17] It was her first major series. Seven of these pieces are included in her Material Witness collection. These artworks are fabric scraps soaked in paint, densely sewn together and on a hanger strung from the ceiling. Presences was presented at Harmony Hammond's first solo exhibition in New York in 1973. The fabric is all different lengths with some strips being layered or tied together to be longer. "Six fabric sculptures appearing slightly larger than life size hang from the ceiling and graze the floor, inviting viewers to join them. Paint applied by artist Harmony Hammond imparts earthy tones to these layered scraps of cloth. Spots of bright color and pattern peek out here and there—plaids, polka dots, florals." [18] Hammond's intention behind the works was to capture the history of women being creative and claiming space. [18] Most of the fabric scraps used to create the pieces in the Presences series were sourced from members of a women's group Hammond was involved with. [4]

Floorpieces

In 1973, Hammond created a series of artworks titled Floorpieces. [19] Hammond created these rugs through a traditional braiding style with colorful, remnant fabric she had found in dumpsters in New York's garment district. [4] [20] The rag-rugs were then painted selectively with acrylic pigment and were displayed on the ground like rugs. Most of Hammond's Floorpieces were approximately 5 ft. (1.5 m) in diameter and almost 2 in. (5 cm) thick. The size and detail of Hammond's artwork is hard to obtain from reproductions and photographs, therefore insisting on the importance of a present viewer. Hammond's Floorpieces challenged the binary between Art and Craft; they also continued the artist's exploration of the space between painting and sculpture. [21] [22] The creation of the Floorpieces coincided with Hammond coming out as a lesbian. [19]

Near Monochromes

Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, Hammond's work began to include fewer sculptural elements, taking on more traditionally painterly forms and focusing more heavily on partially hidden forms beneath layers of paint. [21] Regarding the evolution of her work, Hammond stated: "Over the years, the paintings have gotten simpler, more condensed, with fewer materials in any given piece." [20] The works include materials such as "straps, grommets, bandage-like strips of cloth, or rough burlap patches with fraying edges and pronounced seams." [20]

Recognition

Hammond has had more than 40 solo exhibitions internationally. Her works have been shown in the Tucson Museum of Art, Museum of Contemporary Art, Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, the Vancouver Art Gallery, National Academy Museum, and Museo Tamayo. Her works are also included in permanent collections in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Walker Art Center, the Brooklyn Museum, the National Museum of Women in the Arts, [23] the Art Institute of Chicago, the New Mexico Museum of Art, [24] and the Wadsworth Atheneum. [17]

She has received fellowships from the National Endowment of the Arts, the Rockefeller Foundation, the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation among others. [25] In 2013, the Women's Caucus for Art announced that Hammond would be one of the 2014 recipients of the organization's Lifetime Achievement Award. [26] The Harmony Hammond Papers were acquired by the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles in 2016. [11]

Harmony Hammond: Material Witness, Five Decades of Art, Hammond's first comprehensive museum survey, took place at the Aldrich Museum in Ridgefield, Connecticut. The exhibit traveled to the Sarasota Art Museum in Sarasota, Florida, in 2020. [27] [28] [1] The exhibit was accompanied by the first hardcover monograph written on Hammond's work, with an essay by the exhibit's curator, Amy Smith-Stewart. [1] [22]

Public collections

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Feminist art movement in the United States</span> Promoting the study, creation, understanding, and promotion of womens art, began in 1970s

The feminist art movement in the United States began in the early 1970s and sought to promote the study, creation, understanding and promotion of women's art. First-generation feminist artists include Judy Chicago, Miriam Schapiro, Suzanne Lacy, Judith Bernstein, Sheila de Bretteville, Mary Beth Edelson, Carolee Schneeman, Rachel Rosenthal, and many other women. They were part of the Feminist art movement in the United States in the early 1970s to develop feminist writing and art. The movement spread quickly through museum protests in both New York and Los Angeles, via an early network called W.E.B. that disseminated news of feminist art activities from 1971 to 1973 in a nationally circulated newsletter, and at conferences such as the West Coast Women's Artists Conference held at California Institute of the Arts and the Conference of Women in the Visual Arts, at the Corcoran School of Art in Washington, D.C..

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Dorothea Rockburne</span> Canadian-American painter (born c. 1932)

Dorothea Rockburne DFA is an abstract painter, drawing inspiration primarily from her deep interest in mathematics and astronomy. Her work is geometric and abstract, seemingly simple but very precise to reflect the mathematical concepts she strives to concretize. "I wanted very much to see the equations I was studying, so I started making them in my studio," she has said. "I was visually solving equations." Her attraction to Mannerism has also influenced her work.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Chitra Ganesh</span>

Chitra Ganesh is a visual artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Ganesh's work across media includes: charcoal drawings, digital collages, films, web projects, photographs, and wall murals. Ganesh draws from mythology, literature, and popular culture to reveal feminist and queer narratives from the past and to imagine new visions of the future.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Miriam Schapiro</span> Canadian artist (1923–2015)

Miriam Schapiro was a Canadian-born artist based in the United States. She was a painter, sculptor, printmaker, and a pioneer of feminist art. She was also considered a leader of the Pattern and Decoration art movement. Schapiro's artwork blurs the line between fine art and craft. She incorporated craft elements into her paintings due to their association with women and femininity. Schapiro's work touches on the issue of feminism and art: especially in the aspect of feminism in relation to abstract art. Schapiro honed in her domesticated craft work and was able to create work that stood amongst the rest of the high art. These works represent Schapiro's identity as an artist working in the center of contemporary abstraction and simultaneously as a feminist being challenged to represent women's "consciousness" through imagery. She often used icons that are associated with women, such as hearts, floral decorations, geometric patterns, and the color pink. In the 1970s she made the hand fan, a typically small woman's object, heroic by painting it six feet by twelve feet. "The fan-shaped canvas, a powerful icon, gave Schapiro the opportunity to experiment … Out of this emerged a surface of textured coloristic complexity and opulence that formed the basis of her new personal style. The kimono, fans, houses, and hearts were the form into which she repeatedly poured her feelings and desires, her anxieties, and hopes".

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Emma Amos (painter)</span> American painter (1937–2020)

Emma Amos was a postmodern African-American painter and printmaker.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">May Stevens</span> American artist, educator, writer, and political activist (1924–2019)

May Stevens was an American feminist artist, political activist, educator, and writer.

Carrie Moyer is an American painter and writer living in Brooklyn, New York. Moyer's paintings and public art projects have been exhibited both in the US and Europe since the early 1990s, and she is best known for her 17-year agitprop project, Dyke Action Machine! with photographer Sue Schaffner. Moyer's work has been shown at the Whitney Biennial, the Museum of Arts and Design, and the Tang Museum, and is held in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. She serves as the director of the graduate MFA program at Hunter College, and has contributed writing to anthologies and publications like The Brooklyn Rail and Artforum.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Joyce Kozloff</span> American artist (born 1942)

Joyce Kozloff is an American artist known for her paintings, murals, and public art installations. She was one of the original members of the Pattern and Decoration movement and an early artist in the 1970s feminist art movement, including as a founding member of the Heresies collective.

Sheila Pepe is an artist and educator living and working in Brooklyn, New York. She is a prominent figure as a lesbian cross-disciplinary artist, whose work employs conceptualism, surrealism, and craft to address feminist and class issues. Her most notable work is characterized as site-specific installations of web-like structure crocheted from domestic and industrial material, although she works with sculpture and drawing as well. She has shown in museums and art galleries throughout the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Patricia Cronin</span> American painter

Patricia Cronin is a New York-based feminist cross-disciplinary artist. Since the early-1990s, Cronin has garnered international attention for her photographs, paintings and sculptures that address contemporary human rights issues. Cronin's conceptual artistic practice transits across many aesthetic platforms addressing social justice issues of gender, sexuality and class, including: lesbian visibility, feminist art history, marriage equality and international rights of women and LGBTQ+ people. She subverts traditional art images and forms in a wide range of two and three-dimensional time-honored artists' materials and breathes new life into these images and forms by injecting her specific political content. Her critically acclaimed statue, "Memorial To A Marriage", is the first and only Marriage Equality monument in the world. A 3-ton Carrara marble mortuary sculpture of her life partner and herself was made before gay marriage was legal in the U.S., and has been exhibited widely across the country and abroad. Cronin began her career working for the Anne Frank Stichting (Foundation)Archived 2015-10-25 at the Wayback Machine in Amsterdam installing the traveling exhibition "Anne Frank in the World" in Europe and the U.S. Giving presence to female absence is a consistent thread that runs through and connects each body of work.

Mary Beth Edelson was an American artist and pioneer of the feminist art movement, deemed one of the notable "first-generation feminist artists". Edelson was a printmaker, book artist, collage artist, painter, photographer, performance artist, and author. Her works have been shown at the Museum of Modern Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art in Chicago.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cecilia Vicuña</span> Chilean poet, artist and filmmaker

Cecilia Vicuña is a Chilean poet and artist based in New York and Santiago, Chile.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ulrike Müller (artist)</span> Austrian artist

Ulrike Müller is a contemporary visual artist. Müller is a member of the New York-based feminist genderqueer group LTTR as well as an editor of its eponymous journal. She also represented Austria at the Cairo Biennale in 2011. She is currently a professor and co-chair of Painting at the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polly Apfelbaum</span> American contemporary visual artist (born 1955)

Polly E. Apfelbaum is an American contemporary visual artist, who is primarily known for her colorful drawings, sculptures, and fabric floor pieces, which she refers to as "fallen paintings". She currently lives and works in New York City, New York.

Ginger Brooks Takahashi is an American artist based in Brooklyn, New York, and North Braddock, Pennsylvania. A self-identified “punk,” Takahashi grew up in Oregon. She co-founded the feminist genderqueer collective and journal LTTR and the Mobilivre project, a touring exhibition and library. She was also a member of MEN (band). Her work consists of a collaborative project-based practice. Takahashi is currently an adjunct professor of Art at Carnegie Mellon University.

Gloria Klein was an American painter based in New York City. Klein was a member of the Criss-Cross art cooperative. She died on September 23, 2021, at the age of 85.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Kay Turner</span>

Kay Turner is an artist and scholar working across disciplines including performance, writing, music, exhibition curation, and public and academic folklore. She is noted for her feminist writings and performances on subjects such as women’s home altars, fairy tale witches, and historical goddess figures. She co-founded “Girls in the Nose,” a lesbian feminist rock punk band that anticipated riot grrl.

Deborah Bright is a 20th-century American photographer and artist, writer, and educator. She is particularly noted for her imagery and scholarship on queer desire and politics, as well as on the ideologies of American landscape photography. Her work is in the collections of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Fogg Art Museum, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Bright's photographic projects have been exhibited internationally.

Rachel Farmer is an American artist. She is primarily known for her ceramic sculpture and installations. Farmer's work explores Mormon history from a feminist and queer perspective, and is informed by her roots in the Utah area.

Clarity Haynes is a queer feminist American artist and writer. She currently lives and works in New York, NY. Haynes is best known for her unconventional painted portraits of torsos, focusing on queer, trans, cis female and nonbinary bodies. She is a former member of the tART Collective and the Corpus VI Collective.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 "Harmony Hammond: Material Witness, Five Decades of Art". The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum. Retrieved 2020-12-15.
  2. 1 2 Virginia Watson-Jones, Contemporary American Women Sculptors. Phoenix: Oryx Press, 1986. p. 256.
  3. 1 2 "Interviews: Harmony Hammond". We Who Feel Differently. March 6, 2011. Retrieved June 30, 2011.
  4. 1 2 3 Cotter, Holland (2019-08-08). "Harmony Hammond's Art Is Bold and Prickly as Ever (Published 2019)". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2020-12-15.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 "Harmony Hammond". www.harmonyhammond.com. Archived from the original on October 19, 2020. Retrieved December 15, 2020.
  6. Hammond, Harmony (Winter 1996). "Art History". Art Journal. 55 (4): 78–79. doi:10.1080/00043249.1996.10791790 via Art & Architecture Source, EBSCOhost.
  7. Ray, Sharmistha (June 29, 2019). "A Trailblazing Lesbian Artist Gets Her Due". Hyperallergic.
  8. Lynn Hershman. "Harmony Hammond". !Women Art Revolution. Retrieved June 30, 2011.
  9. Temma Balducci. "Heresies." Grove Art Online. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press, accessed February 1, 2014, http://www.oxfordartonline.com/subscriber/article/grove/art/T2085890.
  10. "About Harmony Hammond". Stanford University. Retrieved June 30, 2011.
  11. 1 2 3 Smith-Stewart, Amy (2019). Harmony Hammond: Material Witness, Five Decades of Art. The Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum and Gregory R. Miller & Co. p. 119.
  12. "Guide to the Out West Collection" (PDF). New Mexico Museum of Art. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  13. Helen Langa (2003). "Reviewed work: Lesbian Art in America: A Contemporary History by Harmony Hammond". Woman's Art Journal. 24 (1). Women's Art, Inc.: 42–46. doi:10.2307/1358810. JSTOR   1358810.
  14. 1 2 3 Lampela, Laurel (January 2010). "Expressing Lesbian and Queer Identities in the Works of Three Contemporary Artists of New Mexico". Art Education. 63 (1): 25–32. doi:10.1080/00043125.2010.11519050. S2CID   141996138 via Art & Architecture Source, EBSCOhost.
  15. Margo Hobbs Thompson, "'Lesbians Are Not Women': Feminine and Lesbian Sensibilities in Harmony Hammond's Late-1970s Sculpture," Journal of Lesbian Studies 12, 4 (2008): 435-54
  16. ^ Cooper, Ashton. "Ashton Cooper on Harmony Hammond." Artforum International, vol. 58, no. 2, 10 2019. ProQuest   2352942394.
  17. 1 2 "Brooklyn Museum: Harmony Hammond". www.brooklynmuseum.org. Retrieved 2020-04-23.
  18. 1 2 Haynes, Clarity (2019-06-27). "Going Beneath the Surface: For 50 Years, Harmony Hammond's Art and Activism Has Championed Queer Women". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 2020-04-23.
  19. 1 2 Bryan- Wilson, Julia (March 2017). "Queerly Made: Harmony Hammond's "Floorpieces"". The Journal of Modern Craft. 2 (1): 59–80. doi:10.2752/174967809X416279. S2CID   16267384 via Art & Architecture Source, EBSCOhost.
  20. 1 2 3 "Harmony Hammond talks about her show at Alexander Gray Associates in New York". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2020-12-15.
  21. 1 2 Haynes, Clarity (2016-05-12). "Queering Abstract Art with Wrapped, Grommeted, and "Roughed-Up" Paintings". Hyperallergic. Retrieved 2020-12-15.
  22. 1 2 ^ Mendelsohn, Meredith (2019-07-09). "Harmony Hammond: Material Witness, Five Decades of Art". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 2020-04-07.
  23. "Harmony Hammond". National Museum of Women in the Arts. Retrieved 20 May 2020.
  24. "Related for Harmony Hammond". New Mexico Museum of Art. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
  25. "Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art: Feminist Art Base: Harmony Hammond". Brooklyn Museum. Retrieved June 30, 2011.
  26. "Past Awards and Catalogs". he Women's Caucus for Art. 2 August 2018. Retrieved 2020-12-15.
  27. "Harmony Hammond: Material Witness, Five Decades of Art". Museum Network. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  28. Lang, Joel (2019-03-28). "5 decades of Harmony Hammond's revolutionary work on view at the Aldrich". Connecticut Post. Retrieved 2019-05-02.
  29. "Brooklyn Museum: Harmony Hammond". www.brooklynmuseum.org.
  30. "Radiant Affection 1983–84". www.metmuseum.org.
  31. "Harmony Hammond | MoMA". The Museum of Modern Art.
  32. "Harmony Hammond | Artist Profile". NMWA.
  33. "Harmony Hammond | Smithsonian American Art Museum". americanart.si.edu.
  34. "Harmony Hammond". whitney.org.

Further reading