Guy Benson
Follow Me
2021
10 x 20 inches
Guy Benson
Traveler
2021
11 x 14 inches
Guy Benson
Foursome
2021
10 x 20 inches
Gladys Nilsson
All at Sea
1991
Watercolor
30.25 x 22.5 inches
PD 621
Lee Godie
Untitled
(Woman in profile with a rose in mouth)
Pen on canvas
19 x 18 inches
LGBS 17
Kahn / Selesnick
The Tale of the Demon and the Nine Brothers of Business
Edition of 5
2001
Archival digital print
29 x 83.5 framed
KS 9
Ed Paschke
Holy Stick Man
1969
Acrylic on canvas
28.5 x 24.5 inches
Elizabeth Shreve
Untitled
12-04
Oil on linen
28 x 24 inches
ES 120
Fred Stonehouse
The Drunkards Den
2014
Acrylic on wood
60 x 48 inches
FS 300
Cameron Gray
After Picasso Blue Bust
4/5 edition
Photos, wood, museum board, acrylic box
40 x 37 x 4 inches
CG 69
Polly Becker
Untitled, Book Girl
2020
Mixed media, 18th-century leather-bound photo album
10.5 x 5.5 x 3 1/4 inches
Polly Becker
Untitled, Spools of Thread Woman
2006
Mixed media
8 x 5 x 3.5 inches
Polly Becker
Untitled, Bird-Man
2021
Mixed media
8 x 3 x 2.5 inches
David Sharp
Peonies
6/10/88
Oil on canvas
56 x 36 inches
Bill Traylor
Man with hat in a green suit, pointing at a bird
Crayon and pencil on found cardboard on mat board and frame
11 3/4 x 7 3/4 inches
Bill Traylor
Woman w handbag and umbrella
Pencil and poster paint on found cardboard w mat board and frame
21 x 10 1/4 inches
Mary Lou Zelazny
Waking Cat Suite
2019
Acrylic, collage on panel
12 x 12 inches, 16.5 x 16.5 inches framed
Mary Lou Zelazny
Waking Iceberg
2019
Acrylic, collage on panel
12 x 12 inches, 16.5 x 16.5 inches framed
Mary Lou Zelazny
Waking Somersault
Acrylic, collage, wax on panel
2018
12 x 12 inches, 16.5 x 16.5 inches framed
GO FIGURE!
A Survey of Figurative Art
September 10 – October 30, 2021
Humankind’s fascination with the representation of its own likeness dates back to the evolution of the species itself. From early charcoal and wood stick-figure representations etched onto cave walls by our earliest ancestors, to today’s surrealistic representations via cyberspace interpretations, capturing and defining the essence of the human-animal, alongside our four-legged competitors, provides us not only with a notion of what distinguishes mankind from our animal predecessors and co-inhabitants but how Man survived and achieved. Clearly, representation of the human figure serves as a means for better understanding of being Human, a primary preoccupation of our species ever since evolution/creation.
Interest in our History and the representation of our humanity has been of primary interest to Carl Hammer Gallery from the very beginning of its existence and is primary in the shaping of artist selection and gallery programming. Representation and interpretation of the human figure, both two and three-dimensional, has prominently shaped this gallery’s focus in the selection of subject matter and of artists shown. It has remained at the “heart” of the programming at Carl Hammer Gallery for the past forty years. Here, self-taught and “schooled” artists alike share an in-kind instinct for examining humanity’s past and present within a context of where and who we are in place, in meaning to ourselves, and to others around us. As in other past gallery venues, the art, and artists in Go Figure! enrich our understanding of self, expanding the framework of how we each uniquely view ourselves and our surrounding world. Through these original and insightful portrayals, we celebrate the diversity of our Humanity and the “one-ness” of our collective individuality as well.