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- Home | Robert Kipniss Studio | New York
Robert Kipniss is a distinguished American painter and printmaker. His work has been shown in solo exhibitions at major galleries and museums worldwide since 1951. The Robert Kipniss studio is resource for the artwork and literature from the artist's longstanding career. Robert Kipniss is a distinguished American painter and printmaker. His work has been shown in solo exhibitions at major galleries and museums worldwide since 1951. Robert Kipniss Studio is a resource for the artwork and literature from the artist's longstanding career. ABOUT Learn more ARTWORKS View selected works EXHIBITIONS View selected exhibitions RESOURCES View books, collections, essays, and interviews
- Drypoints & Etchings | Robert Kipniss Studio | New York
Kipniss's first print and only etching was made in 1967. That year he began producing drypoints, which he has made periodically since, although in smaller numbers than his works in other mediums. "Almost all of his drypoints have the large areas of white typical of that medium, creating much more of an effect of outdoor light than his mezzotints." < DRYPOINTS & ETCHINGS Untitled 2020, drypoint, 9.875 x 8 inches. Not editioned. A small copse in a field 2016, drypoint, 6.5 x 7.875 inches. Edition of 16. Untitled 014 1992 (Grace 29), soft-ground etching; key plate impression in black (the edition was printed in three colors from three plates), 6.875 x 7.875 inches. Edition of 75. Pages from a sketchbook #2 2003 (Grace 126), drypoint - printed from two plates w/ chine collé, 9.875 x 8 inches. Edition of 60. Pages from a sketchbook #4 2003, drypoint, 9.375 x 6.875 inches. Edition of 50. Trees 2003 (Grace 128), drypoint, 2 x 2 inches. Edition of 20. Hilltop 1996 (Grace 62), drypoint, 6.875 x 7.5 inches. Edition of 30. Morning, Springfield OR Sunday, Springfield 1992 (Grace 40), drypoint, 6.875 x 7.375 inches. Edition of 50. Near Lancaster 1992 (Grace 39), drypoint, 6.75 x 7.375 inches. Edition of 50. Springfield, O 1991 (Grace 31), drypoint - printed from two plates, Fifth and final state, 1 impression pulled from each previous state, 12.75 x 10.875 inches. Edition of 60. Self-portrait, second state 1969, reprinted 2019 (Lunde 15), drypoint, 10.75 x 9.825 inches. Edition of 17 (1969), and 16 (2019). Pale trees 1968 (Lunde 3), drypoint, 8.25 x 11.75 inches. Edition of 30. View more Kipniss's first print, an etching, was made in 1967 at Pratt Graphics Center. That year he began producing drypoints, which he has made periodically since, although in smaller numbers than his works in other mediums. Almost all of his drypoints have the large areas of white typical of that medium, creating much more of an effect of outdoor light than his mezzotints. Springfield, O . (1991) shows the typical velvety black lines of the drypoint, caused when ink adheres to the raised burr next to the furrow, but Kipniss's lines are placed more tightly than is usual in drypoints. The work is in three institutional collections, including the British Museum, London. After a long hiatus from drypoint, Kipniss has returned to the medium in his later years. Since 2016, he has completed several atmospheric compositions in the medium, working with Anthony Kirk Editions.
- Books | Robert Kipniss: A Working Artist's Life
In this candid memoir, Kipniss recounts the ups and downs of his early career, the failures and successes of gallery exhibitions and gaining recognition, and the joys and struggles of trying to support a family as an artist, all while tenaciously developing his unique style of landscape painting. < Back to all books Robert Kipniss: A Working Artist's Life Hardcover: consult Bookfinder for availability Published by the University Press of New England, 2011 In this candid memoir, Kipniss recounts the ups and downs of his early career, the failures and successes of gallery exhibitions and gaining recognition, and the joys and struggles of trying to support a family as an artist, all while tenaciously developing his unique style of landscape painting. "Poetry and painting were equal passions of mine until I turned thirty and became a father, and I had to earn more money. Getting an evening job meant making a choice, and I stayed with painting, shelving my writing as something I would return to later, perhaps when I was much older," he wrote in the introduction. Decades later he began writing down memories, and when he was fifty-two, he wrote twenty-eight chapters of something he thought might eventually become a memoir. Writing on a typewriter was laborious and discouraging, and he ended up putting the pages aside except for essays about working as an artist for gallery catalogs. After he bought a computer and rewriting became easier, he took up the memoir again. When he neared the ending, he recalls: "I was startled and pleased to see that instead of a random collection of episodes, I saw my life emerging as a whole. I found a consistency and coherence that was as much a function of personality, instinct, and my compulsion to create as it was of conscious thought. It was a perspective impossible to have until I had lived almost eighty years." "Writing about my life has been a little like reliving it, but with the advantage of seeing the unfolding problems and troubles in the context of their eventual resolution. I found this second visit a good thing, even with its many uncomfortable moments, and it has left me at peace, my enthusiasm undiminished." E-book: Brandeis University Press Reviews Sidney Offit "I was enlightened, entertained, and frequently moved by this portrait of the artist composed with a touch of the poet." — Sidney Offit, author of Memoir of the Bookie's Son ; Curator Emeritus, George Polk Journalism Awards; and president, Author’s Guild Association Avis Berman "Like his paintings, Kipniss's prose is clear and evocative, and readers will enjoy following his adventures as he fences against the follies and venality of the art world." — Avis Berman, art historian and author of Rebels on Eighth Street E. John Bullard "Few great painters are great writers, but Kipniss is an exception. In his sensitive and personal memoir, we discover his passionate struggle to achieve his artistic goals, balancing the obligations of his personal life with the great demands of his art." — E. John Bullard, Director Emeritus, New Orleans Museum of Art William A. Kinnison "This is a rare treat. A working artist reviews his life with the same skill with words that he has with brush and stylus." — William A. Kinnison, President Emeritus, Wittenberg University Richard J. Boyle "Robert Kipniss has fashioned a memoir of clarity, sensitivity and insight. Anyone seriously interested in art and the lives of artists, but especially in the mysterious and always fascinating connection between an artist's life and his work, would find this book both enlightening and enjoyable."-- Richard J. Boyle, art historian, former director, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Carol Ascher "Kipniss is an engagingly unpretentious and often humorous raconteur, with pitch-perfect dialogue and a wonderful eye for the telling detail. It's a pleasure to ride along with Kipniss on his candid, well-paced, and witty romp through the New York art world and his life in art." — Carol Ascher, author of Afterimages: A Family Memoir
- Lithographs | Robert Kipniss Studio | New York
From 1968 to 1994, Kipniss created lithographs that followed the style and content of his paintings, whether generally or specifically. A commission from a print publisher in 1968 for five editions of lithographs precipitated his adoption of lithography as a medium. < LITHOGRAPHS Hillside w/ porch & moon 1994, color lithograph, 6 x 5.125 inches. Edition unknown. Roadside, Elsah 1990, color lithograph, 12.5 x 15 inches. Edition of 90. Road to Middleburg 1988, color lithograph, 13 x 11.375 inches. Edition of 120. Revisitation, afternoon 1987, color lithograph, 11 x 15 inches. Edition of 150. Green, Green 1987, color lithograph, 16 x 12 inches. Edition of 120. Streets & alleys, afternoon 1987, color lithograph, 11 x 12.75 inches. Edition of 120. As the rain ends 1987, color lithograph, 10 x 16 inches. Edition of 120. The Blue Stove 1987, color lithograph, 17.5 x 14 inches. Edition of 120. City, dusk 1987, color lithograph, 6.5 x 5 inches. Edition of 150. The Artist’s Bedroom 1986, color lithograph, 12 x 10 inches. Edition of 120. August 1986, color lithograph, 8 x 9 inches. Edition of 120. Invitations 1986, color lithograph, 15.75 x 17 inches. Edition of 120. Small Porch & Clouds 1986, color lithograph, 13.25 x 11 inches. Edition of 120. Poised 1986, color lithograph, 11 x 15 inches. Edition of 120. Just before the sun 1985, color lithograph, 12 x 11 inches. Edition of 120. Suspension II 1985, color lithograph, 10 x 13.5 inches. Edition of 120. Splash 1984, color lithograph, 6.5 x 5 inches. Edition of 175. Ohio moment 1984, color lithograph, 11 x 14.5 inches. Edition of 175. Window sitting 1983, color lithograph, 10.5 x 14 inches. Edition of 120. Souvenirs 1982, color lithograph, 13.5 x 10 inches. Edition of 200. The Other Room 1981 (Lundgren 232-SL), color lithograph, 13.5 x 9 inches. Edition of 150. Small Hilltop 1981 (Lundgren 241-SL), color lithograph, 10 x 13.5 inches. Edition of 120. Remembering 1981 (Lundgren231-SL), color lithograph, 22 x 28 inches. Edition of 120. Just beyond 1980 (Lundgren 216-SL), color lithograph, 14 x 16.75 inches. Edition of 275. Dark Fields 1980, (Lundgren228-SL), lithograph, 4 x 3 inches. Edition of 250. View more "In lithography my great excitement came from effects I can best describe as silvery, like ghosts of gray, grays faint yet fully drawn, with nuances that gave the appearance of images have been just breathed onto the stone, and from there with Burr [Miller]’s magic coaxed to the paper…When printing went smoothly the experience was deeply rewarding, a sense of well-being at having brought to life a vision that could have gone wrong in so many ways, at so many moments. These times were like gifts from an unpredictable printing god, and were the events that made painful failures endurable. It was essential to know my goals could be reachable." - Robert Kipniss, 2002 From 1968 to 1994, Kipniss created lithographs that followed the style and content of his paintings, whether generally or specifically. A commission from a print publisher in 1968 for five editions of lithographs precipitated his adoption of lithography as a medium. Kipniss's first lithographs were done in black and white, but by 1970 he was also working in color. He taught himself "to lay in the most delicately light silvery tones on the surface of the limestone by maintaining an exceptionally sharp point on the lithographic pencil and drawing with no pressure other than the weight of the pencil itself." He built up a support so that his hand and wrist could "dangle" over the stone. By 1994 Kipniss had completed about 450 editions of lithographs, usually of 90 to 250 impressions, at the Burr Miller studio in Manhattan. He worked from 1969 with master printer Burr Miller and then with Steve and Terry, his sons. In 1980 Kipniss began to draw on aluminum to make all of his lithographs, and by 1986 he was achieving an increased subtlety in the use of color with a light palette including "greens, blues, pinks, browns, and grays," as a critic noted that year. He added: "Kipniss enhances the remarkable purity and elegance of line in these lithographs by his restrained use of color. The delicate hues of his prints are of such extraordinary subtlety that it is only on careful examination that the viewer can recognize how complex they are, requiring as many as eight different plates to produce a single print." In 1994 Kipniss's concern with densely drawn fine tones led to increased difficulties in printing, and he gave up the medium.
- Books | Robert Kipniss: Paintings and Poetry, 1950-1964
This intriguing monograph of painter and printmaker Robert Kipniss is an intimate look at a memorable period in his life and career. Thoughtful and articulate from conception to completion, the artist's never-before-published poems are choreographed with his early paintings in this contemplation of the influential and foundational years from 1950 to 1964. Robert Kipniss: Paintings and Poetry, 1950 - 1964 Available from the publisher Monograph with paintings and poetry by the artist Preface by Robert Kipniss Introduction by Marshall N. Price, National Academy of Art Essay by Robin Magowan, Poet Published by The Artist Book Foundation, New York and North Adams, Massachusetts, 2013 This intriguing monograph of painter and printmaker Robert Kipniss is an intimate look at a memorable period in his life and career. Thoughtful and articulate from conception to completion, the artist's never-before-published poems are choreographed with his early paintings in this contemplation of the influential and foundational years from 1950 to 1964. Kipniss's own thoughts on this period of his career are accompanied by insightful essays by Marshall N. Price, curator of modern and contemporary art at the National Academy Museum, New York; and Robin Magowan, an award-winning poet based in Santa Fe. Preview Book < Back to all books
- Collections | Robert Kipniss Studio | New York
Robert Kipniss has artwork in major collections including the Syracuse University Art Museum, the Fort Wayne Museum of Art, and the Allentown Art Museum to name a few. COLLECTIONS MAJOR REPOSITORIES Smithsonian Archives of American Art View Details Washington, DC Wittenberg University Library View Details Springfield, Ohio Syracuse University Art Museum View Details Syracuse, New York Fort Wayne Museum of Art View Details Fort Wayne, Indiana Allentown Art Museum View Details Allentown, Pennsylvania The British Museum View Details London, England The Metropolitan Museum of Art View Details New York, New York The Heckscher Museum of Art View Details Huntington, New York SELECTED ADDITIONAL PUBLIC COLLECTIONS A - F Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts, The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco Albertina Museum, Vienna, Austria Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York The Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois Ashmolean Museum, Oxford Bates College Museum of Art, Lewiston, Maine Bibliothèque nationale de France, Paris The Boston Athenaeum, Boston, Massachusetts Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, Maine Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, New York The Butler Institute of American Art, Youngstown, Ohio Canton Art Institute, Canton, Ohio Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania The Century Association, New York, New York Chazen Museum of Art, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Wisconsin The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, Ohio Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, Ohio De Cordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Lincoln, Massachusetts Cornell Fine Arts Museum, Winter Park, Florida Davis Gallery, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, New York The Denver Art Museum, Denver, Colorado The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, Michigan Everson Museum of Art, Syracuse, New York Federal Reserve Board Fine Arts Program, Washington, D.C. Fitzwilliam Museum, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, England Frederick R. Weisman Art Museum, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis G - M Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, South Carolina Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts The Heckscher Museum of Art, Huntington, New York The Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Cornell University, Ithaca, New York Hofstra University Museum, Hempstead, New York Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indianapolis, Indiana Iris & B. Gerald Cantor Center for Visual Arts at Stanford University, Stanford, California Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, New Brunswick, New Jersey Joel and Lila Harnett Museum of Art, University of Richmond Museums, Richmond, Virginia Library of Congress, Washington, D.C. Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California Maier Museum of Art, Randolph College, Lynchburg, Virginia McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas Minnesota Museum of American Art, Saint Paul, Minnesota Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte, North Carolina The Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, Michigan The Morgan Library & Museum, New York, New York Munson-Williams-Proctor Arts Institute, Utica, New York Museo de Arte Moderno La Tertulia, Cali, Colombia Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, Rhode Island Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Massachusetts The Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, Texas N - Z National Academy of Design, New York, New York The Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri The New Britain Museum of American Art, New Britain, Connecticut New Orleans Museum of Art, New Orleans, Louisiana The New York Public Library, Print Collection, New York, New York Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Pinakothek der Moderne, Staatliche Graphische Sammlung, Munich Springfield Art Museum, Springfield, Missouri Springfield Museum of Art, Springfield, Ohio Victoria and Albert Museum, London Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond, Virginia The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, New York Wichita Falls Museum and Art Center, Wichita Falls, Texas Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, Connecticut
- Biographical Timeline | Robert Kipniss Studio | New York
BIOGRAPHY Robert Kipniss is a distinguished American painter and printmaker. His work has been shown in solo exhibitions at galleries and museums worldwide since 1951. He is a Royal Academician (retired), an elected member of the National Academy of Design, New York, and holds two honorary doctorates. His work is represented in the collections of numerous public institutions, including The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Art Institute of Chicago, The Whitney Museum of American Art, the Smithsonian American Art Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, and many others. He has created over 750 editions and is perhaps best known as one of the leading living practitioners of mezzotint. After working in various locations in New York City for over three decades, in 1989 he moved his studio to Ardsley-on-Hudson, New York. He now lives and works in Sharon, Connecticut. "For over five decades, Robert Kipniss has prolifically produced paintings, prints, and drawings of remarkable beauty, eloquence, and refinement...he has gained international recognition for his distinctly American images of spacious landscapes and smalltown vistas, as well as quiet interiors and intimate still lifes. Following in the footsteps of such esteemed predecessors as Paul Cezanne and Giorgio Morandi, the artist has faithfully investigated and reexamined these familiar, humble subjects...He has never felt confined or restricted by their narrow range; rather, he is liberated within it... Kipniss's art has always clearly bespoken his independent spirit and lifelong embrace of solitude." − Daniel Piersol, Seen In Solitude: Robert Kipniss Prints from the James F. White Collection (New Orleans Museum of Art, 2006) BIOGRAPHICAL TIMELINE 1931 Born in Brooklyn, NY 1947 Begins classes at the Art Students League of New York 1948 Attends Wittenberg College (now University), Springfield, OH, starts writing poetry 1950 Transfers to the University of Iowa to major in literature; also takes painting classes 1951 First solo show, Creative Gallery, 57th St, NYC 1952 Graduates from the University of Iowa and accepted into the MFA program 1953 Second solo show, Harry Salpeter Gallery, 57th Street, NYC 1954 Earns MFA from University of Iowa; marries first wife Jean Prutton 1956 Serves in U.S. Army, stationed at Fort Lee in Petersburg, VA 1959 Moves to New York City; represented by The Contemporaries, 992 Madison Ave 1964 Ceases writing poetry to focus on painting; represented by FAR Gallery, NYC 1964 Represented by FAR Gallery, 746 Madison Ave 1965 First solo museum exhibition, Allen R. Hite Institute, University of Louisville, KY 1966 Moves to Boerum Hill, Brooklyn, NY 1967 Begins printmaking at Pratt Center for Graphics; first works are intaglios 1968 Develops affinity for lithography; prints at the Bank Street Atelier, then George C. Miller and Son 1970 Moves to Great Neck, New York; first editions commission published by Associated American Artists (AAA) 1972 Represented by Merrill Chase Galleries, Chicago, IL 1972 Moves to Tarrytown, New York 1975 Represented by Hirschl & Adler Galleries, NYC 1976 Represented by The Contemporaries, 992 Madison Avenue, NYC 1979 Receives honorary doctorate from Wittenberg University, Springfield, OH 1980 Robert Kipniss: The Graphic Work catalogue raisonné published by Abaris Books 1980 Represented by Hirschl & Adler, 21 E 70th St 1981 Represented by Harmon-Meek Gallery, Naples, FL 1982 Begins working in mezzotint 1983 First marriage ends and moves to Ardsley-on-Hudson, NY 1984 Represented by Gerhard Wurzer Gallery, Houston, TX 1989 Receives honorary doctorate from Illinois College, Jacksonville, Illinois; moves studio to Ardsley-on-Hudson, NY 1990 Intensifies intaglio practice, particularly mezzotint; lithography wanes 1994 Marries writer Laurie Lisle; establishes second home and studio in Sharon, CT; makes final lithographs with George C. Miller and Son; represented by Hexton Gallery, NYC 1995 Represented by The Redfern Gallery, London, England; begins printing intaglios with Kathy Caraccio Studio, NYC 1998 Represented by The Old Print Shop, NYC 1999 Represented by Galerie Gerda Bassenge, Berlin 2000 Represented by Weinstein Gallery, San Francisco, CA and Beadleston Gallery, NYC 2003 Begins printing with Anthony Kirk at The Center for Contemporary Printmaking, Norwalk, CT 2004 Robert Kipniss: Intaglios,1982-2004 catalogue raisonné published by Hudson Hills; archive of 69 prints established at Wittenberg University; represented by The Old Print Shop, NYC; begins to print with Anthony Kirk at the Center for Contemporary Printmaking, Norwalk, CT 2005 Robert Kipniss: Paintings,1950-2005 monograph published by Hudson Hills Press 2006 "Seen in Solitude: Robert Kipniss Prints from the James F. White Collection," retrospective of prints with selected paintings, opens at the New Orleans Museum of Art and travels to five additional museums; review by Roberta Hershenson, "Show Marked by Poignancy," The New York Times, 2/26/06 2007 Lifetime Achievement Award from the Society of American Graphic Artists, NYC 2008 Represented by ebo Gallery, Millwood, New York 2010 Medal for Lifetime Achievement in Art from The Artists' Fellowship 2011 Robert Kipniss: A Working Artist's Life, a memoir, published by the University Press of New England 2011 Represented by Franklin Riehlman Gallery, NYC 2013 Robert Kipniss: Paintings and Poetry,1950-1964, published by The Artist Book Foundation, North Adams, MA; papers acquired by the Smithsonian Archives of American Art; continues printing with Anthony Kirk at Anthony Kirk Editions 2016 Solo exhibition of paintings at Fort Wayne Museum of Art, Indiana; solo exhibition of the graphics at Syracuse University Art Museum to celebrate the establishment of archive of 352 prints 2011 Shine , a novella, published by Four Directions Press, Rhinebeck, New York 2018 Retires from painting due to physical limitations, continues to draw and make intaglio prints 2019 Archive of 16 paintings and 110 prints established at Fort Wayne Museum of Art, IN 2020 Resides full-time in Sharon, Connecticut, maintains studio in Ardsley-on-Hudson, NY; represented by CK Contemporary, San Francisco, CA 2023 Solo exhibitions at The Artist Book Foundation, North Adams, MA and The Fort Wayne Museum of Art; represented by Kiechel Fine Art, Lincoln, NE 2024 Celebration of Seen in Solitude at CK Contemporary in honor of the artist’s 93rd birthday, with a selection of works originally shown at the New Orleans Museum of Art’s 2006 exhibition Robert Kipniss American painter and printmaker b. 1931, Brooklyn, NY Biographical Timeline click on gallery to view images
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I am a title 01 This item is connected to a text field in your content manager. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content. This item is connected to a text field in your content manager. Double click the dataset icon to add your own content. Want to view and manage all your collections? Click the Data icon on the add panel to your left. In the Content Manager, you can update your items, add new fields, create dynamic pages and more. Your collection is already set up with fields and content. Add your own by editing each field, or import CSV files to your content manager. You can create fields for rich text, images, videos and more. Remember to click Sync, so visitors can see your collections on your live site. You can add as many collections as you need. Use input elements like custom forms and fields to collect info from your site visitors and store it in your content manager Collections. Make sure all your elements Connect to Data, and Preview your Live Site to check that everything is correctly binded. Previous Item Next Item
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