Ted Larsen (sculptor)

Last updated

Ted Larsen
Born1964 (age 5960)
EducationNorthern Arizonan University and Whittier College
Known for Contemporary visual art

Ted Larsen (born 1964) is an American contemporary visual artist living and working in Santa Fe, New Mexico. He makes small scale work from repurposed salvaged materials.

Contents

Early life and education

As a young child, Larsen was attracted to discarded tools, tractor parts, and other equipment that lay in a pile on his family property in South Haven, Michigan. He also played in abandoned airplanes in a nearby airport. [1] At the age of 15 Larsen moved from Michigan to Santa Fe with his family. After graduating from Santa Fe Preparatory School, he earned a Bachelor of Arts degree from Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff. [2]

Career

Ted Larsen found early success as a landscape painter that included iconic barn images. By the time he was 22, he exhibited at the Philadelphia Museum of Art. [3] He became dissatisfied with painting and abandoned his practice after the World Trade Center attacks in 2001. He began cutting and arranging scraps of metal, built around a substructure of birch laminate material. [1] With a painter's eye, Larsen searches for material to work with at salvage yards, then further processes materials in his studio. Larsen states, "I am indeed looking for a palette— different types of greens, blues, yellows. They have to have a certain quality, not too raw, not too clean." [4]

Larsen's work has been exhibited widely in private foundations and museums in the US, including the New Mexico Museum of Art in Santa Fe, [5] The Albuquerque Museum, [6] The Amarillo Museum of Art, [7] and The Spiva Center for the Arts in Joplin, Missouri.[ citation needed ]

He has guest lectured at the South Carolina Governor's School for the Arts;[ undue weight? discuss ] the Santa Fe University of Art and Design; the Palm Springs Art Museum; the New Mexico Museum of Art; SITE Santa Fe; the Texas Society of Architects; the Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art, Boulder, Colorado; [8] the Denver Museum of Art. [9] [ non-primary source needed ] [10] [ non-primary source needed ]

His work was favorably reviewed by Elisabeth Sussman. [11]

Achievements

Larsen's received a Pollock-Krasner Foundation award, [12] as well as grant recipient of the Surdna Foundation; residencies with the Edward F. Albee Foundation and Asilah Arts Festival in Morocco, where he represented the United States. [13]

Collections

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Allan Houser</span> American sculptor and painter

Allan Capron Houser or Haozous was a Chiricahua Apache sculptor, painter, and book illustrator born in Oklahoma. He was one of the most renowned Native American painters and Modernist sculptors of the 20th century.

Luis Alfonso JiménezJr. was an American sculptor and graphic artist of Mexican descent who identified as a Chicano. He was known for portraying Mexican, Southwestern, Hispanic-American, and general themes in his public commissions, some of which are site specific. The most famous of these is Blue Mustang. Jiménez died in an industrial accident during its construction. It was commissioned by the Denver International Airport and completed after his death.

Larry Bell is an American contemporary artist and sculptor. He is best known for his glass boxes and large-scaled illusionistic sculptures. He is a grant recipient from, among others, the National Endowment for the Arts and the Guggenheim Foundation, and his artworks are found in the collections of many major cultural institutions. He lives and works in Taos, New Mexico, and maintains a studio in Venice, California.

Ed Moses was an American artist based in Los Angeles and a central figure of postwar West Coast art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Gloria Graham</span> American artist based in New Mexico (born 1940)

Gloria Graham is an American artist based in New Mexico. Her work includes sculpture, painting, and photography.

Harmony Hammond 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.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tom Joyce</span> American sculptor

Tom Joyce is a sculptor and MacArthur Fellow known for his work in forged steel and cast iron. Using skills and technology acquired through early training as a blacksmith, Joyce addresses the environmental, political, and social implications of using iron in his work. Exhibited internationally since the 1980s, his work is included in 30-plus public collections in the U.S. and abroad. Joyce works in Santa Fe, New Mexico producing sculpture, drawings, prints, photographs, and videos that reference themes of iron in the human body, iron in industry, and iron in the natural world.

Jacobo de la Serna is a ceramic artist, Spanish Colonial scholar and painter. His work is exhibited in permanent collections around the United States.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Eugenie Shonnard</span> American sculptor and painter

Eugenie Frederica Shonnard (1886–1978) was an American sculptor and painter born in Yonkers, New York.

Susan York is an American artist and educator known for her reductive cast graphite sculpture. She lives and works in Santa Fe, New Mexico where the quality of light and expansive emptiness of the high desert landscape provides inspiration.

Oli Sihvonen was a post-World War II American artist known for hard-edge abstract paintings. Sihvonen's style was greatly influenced by Josef Albers who taught him color theory and Bauhaus aesthetics at Black Mountain College in the 1940s. Sihvonen was also influenced by Russian Constructivism, Piet Mondrian, and Pierre Matisse. His work has been linked to Abstract Expressionism, Minimalism, Hard-Edge and Op-Art.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Constance DeJong (visual artist)</span> American visual artist (born 1950)

Constance DeJong is an American visual artist who works in the margin between sculpture and painting/drawing. Her predominate medium is metal with light as a dominant factor. She is currently working in New Mexico and is a professor of sculpture at the University of New Mexico. DeJong received a National Endowment for the Arts Visual Art Fellowship in 1982. In 2003, she had a retrospective at the Albuquerque Museum of Art and History. That same year, Constance DeJong: Metal was published and released by University of New Mexico Press. Her work has been described by American art critic Dave Hickey as "work worth seeing and thinking about under any circumstances".

Robert Ray was an American artist, active in the middle to late twentieth century.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Rose B. Simpson</span> Mixed-media artist

Rose B. Simpson of Khaʼpʼoe Ówîngeh is a mixed-media artist who works in ceramic, metal, fashion, painting, music, performance, and installation. She lives and works in Santa Clara Pueblo, New Mexico. Her work has been exhibited at SITE Santa Fe ; the Heard Museum ; the Museum of Contemporary Native Art, Santa Fe (2010); the National Museum of the American Indian, Smithsonian (2008); the Denver Art Museum; Pomona College Museum of Art (2016); Ford Foundation Gallery (2019); The Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian (2017); the Minneapolis Institute of Art (2019); the Savannah College of Art and Design (2020); the Nevada Museum of Art (2021); Whitney Museum of American Art, and the Norton Museum of Art (2024).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christine McHorse</span> Ceramics artist of Navajo descent (1948–2021)

Christine McHorse, also known as Christine Nofchissey McHorse, was a Navajo ceramic artist from Santa Fe, New Mexico.

Cannupa Hanska Luger is a New Mexico-based interdisciplinary artist whose community-oriented artworks address environmental justice and gender violence issues.

Eve Aschheim is an American draftsperson and painter.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Maye Torres</span> American artist

Maye Torres is an American artist who specializes in large-scale drawings and sculptures. Raised in New Mexico and Latin America, her work is influenced by the arts, cultures and spiritual beliefs of those areas.

References

  1. 1 2 Abatemarco, Michael (January 16, 2015). "Abandonment to rebirth: Artist Ted Larsen". Santa Fe New Mexican Pasatiempo.
  2. Smith, Craig (Fall 2014). "Trouble with the Curve" (PDF). Trend magazine.
  3. Porter, Clayton (August 28, 2019). "Studio Visit: Ted Larsen". Southwest Contemporary.
  4. Rothstein, Scott (March 1, 2014). "Ted Larsen: Surfaced Forms". Sculpture. Retrieved January 25, 2021.
  5. "Artists featured in Art on the Edge". NM Museum Archive.
  6. Smith, Craig (Fall 2014). "Trouble with the Curve" (PDF). Trend magazine.
  7. "Texas exhibit". Albuquerque Journal . May 7, 2004. p. 128. Retrieved June 11, 2024 via Newspapers.com.
  8. "Ted Larsen Lined Out". BMoCA.org.
  9. "ADAPT (iteration 2)".
  10. "Ted Larsen at the Robischon Gallery in Denver". Wall Street International Magazine. June 29, 2018.
  11. "Ted Larsen By Elisabeth Sussman" (PDF). Joshua Liner Gallery.
  12. Mora, Elsa. "Ted Larsen's Sculptures". Art is a Way.
  13. "Ted Larsen". kolaj.
  14. "Sugar Daddy". New Mexico Museum of Art.
  15. "Ted Larsen". Lannan Foundation.