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Elizabeth Murray: Painters Progress

Elizabeth Murray

Mar 4 – May 25

The Museum of Modern Art
Museum

The Museum of Modern Art

11 W 53rd St, New York, NY 10019

Tue-Sun 10:30am-5:30pm, Thu until 8pm

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Paid Admission

Free with Museum admission

About

"I begin my work by making a big mess and then find my way out." Over the course of her five-decade career, Elizabeth Murray sought to incorporate dimension and movement into painting by fracturing, splicing, and layering her canvases. In the 1980s, she experienced a breakthrough: after years of making flat, two-dimensional paintings, she began fragmenting her compositions across multiple canvases, adding dynamism and depth. Murray found catharsis in "taking something broken and trying to make it conceptually whole." This exhibition traces the development of Murray's practice through a concise selection of works drawn from over 20 years, including Painters Progress (1981), one of the earliest examples of paintings the artist referred to as "shattered shapes." Working quickly, to invite spontaneity, she began by making sketches of the forms that would become her canvases and arranging them directly on the wall. She chose to depict everyday objects such as cups and paintbrushes, distorting them into organic forms resembling heads, mouths, and uteri. Murray once likened the potential for endless interpretations of her work to searching for an image in the clouds. This presentation is dedicated to the memory of Agnes Gund (1938–2025).

Tags

paintingcontemporarysolo exhibitionabstractmodernism
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