Howardena Pindell
Howardena Pindell
Victoria Miro presents an exhibition of recent works and large-scale paintings from the 1970s by Howardena Pindell, the gallery’s first presentation since announcing representation of the US artist, and Pindell’s first solo exhibition in the UK.
Howardena Pindell is recognised as a leading contributor to contemporary dialogues around the social and political urgency of process-driven art. The works in this exhibition are abstract paintings and collages drawn from two distinct periods in the artist’s career: large-scale spray paintings from the early 1970s; and smaller wall-mounted three-dimensional works completed since 2007. A focus on Pindell’s pursuit of abstraction gives rise to thematic symmetries within and between the works, which, despite having been completed decades apart, reveal the extent of her ongoing formal analysis and material innovation. In addition, the exhibition’s focus underlines a preoccupation with the grid and the circle, which have been mainstays of Pindell’s enquiring, vital art over the past five decades.
The paintings on view were completed during the early 1970s, when Pindell was first living in New York after having completed her studies at Yale. These were incredibly innovative years for the artist. In 1967, her graduation year, Pindell accepted a job at MoMA, in doing so becoming the first black woman to be appointed to the museum’s curatorial staff. In 1972, she was a founding member of the pioneering feminist A.I.R. Gallery, subsequently exhibiting at the gallery in 1973 and 1983.
Created while holding down a full-time job, and often at night, Pindell’s spray paintings of this period were made by the artist using as templates discarded cardstock, manila folders and heavy watercolour paper, from which holes were then punched. Spraying paint directly through these perforations, and repeating the process across her large-scale canvases, Pindell arrived at a series of sublime abstract works that are by turns smoulderingly intense and shimmering with light.
Each investigates themes of control and chance that have been of interest to the artist since the beginning of her career. Through the repeated action of paint, her serried ranks of dots, grid-like in essence, become endlessly shifting in their overlays, supporting myriad fluctuations of light, tone and colour. A kind of pointillism freed from the burden of figurative description, these energised, optical fields, which read as predominantly of a single hue from a distance, up close unfold as a series of shifting sensations. Rigorous yet ethereal in appearance, they are endlessly engaging.
Collage has played a key role in Pindell’s art since the 1970s, her engagement with the paper chads that result from the hole punch process emerging organically from the process of creating her spray paintings. These small circles of paper or card were incorporated into her painting process as early as 1973. Later, Pindell began building up the punched out dots on the canvas, sometimes adding other materials, such as a sprinkling of glitter across the surface, too.
Attached to wire armatures, or mounted on board, the circles and ovals she corrals into service in these recent works, some punched out of colourful drawings created by the artist over several years, abut and overlap, with many individual parts standing on their edges, bursting out of the notional picture frame. While the grid format remains present in a number of works, the forms of these layered, detailed works tend towards the amorphous, creating dynamic tension between aggregate and whole.
Separating the two bodies of work on view is a life-changing event. In 1979, Pindell was involved as a passenger in a car accident that left her with short-term memory loss. She has spoken of the impact of this event on her subsequent work as an attempt to ‘mend the rupture’ brought about by concussion. More overtly autobiographical work followed, where abstraction and figuration were stitched together almost as an act of remembering. The works on view, however, speak conversely of continuity. Pindell’s preoccupation with the grid and the circle has been uninterrupted, while these forms have moved seamlessly between canvas and works on paper.
These forms are not without personal significance, however. Just as her endlessly nuanced canvases transcend the presumed rigidity of the grid, Pindell’s focus on the circle runs counter to geometric abstraction’s perceived, or in certain quarters desired, non-objectivity (in particular, its distance from personal narrative). Of her persistent use of the circle, Pindell has often cited a particular event in her childhood when, during a visit to Kentucky with her father, root beer was served to them in mugs marked with red circles – an indignity reserved for black people under segregation. Pindell’s repeated use of this form can be read partly as an act of remedy and transformation. Yet, she is also quick to counterbalance this memory with other points of influence, including the lottery scratch-card games she knew as a child, and the gift of a microscope, which afforded close-up views of minute structures.
Pindell has suggested that, in her early career, her commitment to abstraction was in part a means of countering aesthetic expectations of black contemporary art. Her visual preference for finely wrought details over sweeping statements, meanwhile, attests to her belief in the value of human subjectivity. One reading of her work might be to see the vibrant dots, whether conjured in paint or collage, as myriad human individuals. Her privileging of the sensory and tactile, meanwhile, confirms that Pindell’s independence of thought is equalled by her generosity of spirit.
In Focus
Howardena Pindell at Victoria Miro Mayfair
In this film, Howardena Pindell reponds to seeing her work installed at Victoria Miro Mayfair. The artist's first solo UK exhibition continues until 27 July 2019.
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July 1 2022
The Guardian reviews Howardena Pindell: A New Language at Kettle’s Yard
★★★★★ 'The themes of structure versus chaos, pattern in variety, which Pindell’s early paintings explore is not just aesthetic. It suggests the bigger patterns of history and power, the structure of human relationships.' Jonathan Jones, The Guardian -
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June 14 2022
Howardena Pindell: A New Language at Kettle’s Yard
Howardena Pindell: A New Language, the artist’s first solo institutional exhibition in the UK (on view at Kettle's Yard, Cambridge from 2 July 2022), brings together work from Pindell’s six-decade-long career, including paintings, works on paper, and video. The exhibition tracks the development of Pindell’s artistic language, and examines her work as exemplary in articulating empowerment. Kettle's Yard, Cambridge -
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November 2 2020
Howardena Pindell talks to The Guardian
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October 16 2020
Howardena Pindell: Rope/Fire/Water opens at The Shed
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Howardena Pindell talks to The New York Times
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October 16 2020
‘I put myself – the Black body – in the work,’ – Howardena Pindell talks to Time about her new exhibition at The Shed
In 1979, Howardena Pindell quit her job in the curatorial department of The Museum of Modern Art to start teaching at the State University of New York at Stony Brook. Months into her new profession, she was a passenger in a car accident that left her with a hip injury and a dent in her head, causing memory loss. The near-death situation inspired an epiphany for Pindell, already an artist outside of her working hours: she needed to voice her opinion, she needed to do it now, and her art was the perfect way to do it. Anna Purna Kambhampaty, Time -
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March 3 2020
Howardena Pindell in conversation at The Armory Show
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February 11 2020
The Art Newspaper’s top shows to see during Frieze LA, featuring Howardena Pindell and Do Ho Suh
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January 22 2020
Howardena Pindell is announced as a 2020 USA Fellow
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December 20 2019
Just announced – Howardena Pindell: Rope/Fire/Water at The Shed, New York in October 2020
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November 27 2019
Howardena Pindell is honoured with the rank of Distinguished Professor by the State University of New York
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November 22 2019
Howardena Pindell features in Making Knowing: Craft in Art, 1950–2019 at the Whitney
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November 11 2019
Wangechi Mutu and Howardena Pindell take part in Conversation, Looking Back at 50 Years of Change in the Visual Arts
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November 9 2019
Soul of a Nation, featuring Alice Neel and Howardena Pindell, travels to the de Young Museum, San Francisco
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October 22 2019
Smithsonian Institution’s Archives of American Art honours Howardena Pindell
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August 28 2019
Howardena Pindell takes part in a MoMA panel discussion
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July 10 2019
Howardena Pindell talks to The Brooklyn Rail
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June 28 2019
Howardena Pindell is featured in ACE: Art on Sports, Promise, and Selfhood
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June 14 2019
Apollo interviews Howardena Pindell
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June 7 2019
The Art Newspaper recommends Howardena Pindell’s exhibition at Victoria Miro Mayfair
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June 7 2019
Howardena Pindell talks to the Financial Times
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June 7 2019
The Art Newspaper Podcast, featuring Howardena Pindell
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June 6 2019
Artnet interviews Howardena Pindell
Hettie Judah interviews the US artist on the eve of her first solo UK exhibition. Hettie Judah, Artnet -
Channel
June 5 2019
Howardena Pindell at Victoria Miro Mayfair
Held at Victoria Miro Mayfair (5 June–27 July 2019) Howardena Pindell’s first solo exhibition in the UK included abstract paintings and collages drawn from two distinct periods in the artist’s career: large-scale spray paintings from the early 1970s; and smaller wall-mounted three-dimensional works completed since 2007. -
Preview
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May 27 2019
Howardena Pindell talks to Vogue
'It has been a rollercoaster experience,' she says of her five decades in the art world. She is 'stunned' by the upsurge of interest in her work, and grateful. 'For years I considered it under the radar; a message tossed out to sea in a bottle.' Louis Wise, Vogue -
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May 3 2019
Howardena Pindell in conversation with Jo Applin, Naomi Beckwith and Amy Tobin
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Exhibition
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March 24 2019
Soul of a Nation, featuring Howardena Pindell, travels to The Broad
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March 23 2019
Howardena Pindell talks to The New York Times
Pindell discusses her response to the resurgence of interest in her work as part of an extensive feature about the rise of older African-American artists. Hilarie M Sheets, The New York Times -
Review
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March 7 2019
The Boston Globe reviews Howardena Pindell:What Remains To Be Seen at Rose Art Museum
'On either side of the divide, she’s nothing less than heroic. Early works are demure subversion — playful, knowing, sensual, elegant.' Murray Whyte, The Boston Globe -
Exhibition
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February 1 2019
Howardena Pindell:What Remains To Be Seen at Rose Art Museum
This major exhibition (1 February–19 May 2019) spans the New York–based artist’s five-decade career, featuring early figurative paintings, pure abstraction, and conceptual works, as well as personal and political art that emerged in the aftermath of a life-threatening car accident in 1979. The exhibition traces themes and visual experiments that run throughout Pindell’s work up to the present. Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, Massachusetts -
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January 18 2019
As reported in Artforum and Art News, Howardena Pindell is awarded the College Art Association’s 2019 Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement
The College Art Association has revealed the winners of its 2019 awards for distinction, with Howardena Pindell receiving the 2019 Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement. Alex Greenberger, Art News -
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April 10 2018
Frieze reviews Howardena Pindell: What Remains To Be Seen at MCA Chicago
'Pindell’s best works are incisive, but also uplifting; the various socio-political issues they address are unified by sensuous detail that invites viewers in for a closer look.' Natalie Haddad, Frieze