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Alice Dalton Brown
Born (1939-04-17) April 17, 1939 (age 84)
EducationOberlin College, Cornell University
Known forPaintings, pastel drawings
StyleRealism
SpouseEric R. Brown (m. 1960–current)
WebsiteAlice Dalton Brown
Alice Dalton Brown, Grand Westfield Porch, oil on linen, 54" x 138", 1980.

Alice Dalton Brown (born 1939) is an American painter known for realist works that capture the light and texture of specific, if often invented, places and moments.[1][2][3] Her signature motifs include exteriors of Victorian houses, barns and waterscapes viewed through windows or sheer curtains, by which she explores the play of light, shadow, reflection and geometry across various surfaces.[4][5][6] Critic J. Bowyer Bell wrote of Dalton Brown's style, "her realist works are more than the sum of their parts. In fact, there are so many parts so cunningly included, so many skills on display, that the result is almost an encyclopedia of what can be done."[7]

Dalton Brown has exhibited at institutions including the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art,[8] Butler Institute of American Art,[9] Bronx Museum of the Arts, Albright-Knox Museum, and McNay Art Museum.[2] She has been recognized by the American Academy in Rome and her work belongs to the public collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art,[10] Johnson Museum,[11] Minneapolis Institute of Art,[12] and Tampa Museum of Art, among others.[2] After being based in New York City for over three decades, Dalton Brown splits time between Peekskill, New York and the state's Finger Lakes region, at Cayuga Lake.[13]

Early life and career

Dalton Brown was born in Danville, Pennsylvania in 1939 and grew up in Ithaca, New York.[14] Her memories of the light, shadows and homes during her youth in the area would serve as later inspirations for her art.[15] After high school, Dalton Brown studied art at the Académie Julian and the L'Université de Grenoble in France before majoring in English at Cornell University.[14][16] After transferring to Oberlin College, she earned a BA in studio art in 1962, working in a realist vein at odds with the day's dominant abstract modes. She was greatly influenced at Oberlin by art historian Wolfgang Stechow and his discussions of compositional dynamics and iconography.[17][16]

In the 1960s, Dalton Brown balanced family life and artmaking focused on images of interiors, figures and rural structures after a move to upstate New York. She and her family relocated to Greenwich Village, Manhattan in 1970, where she encountered in close proximity an art scene expanding from Abstract Expressionism into minimalism, conceptualism and various modes of realism.[5][16] In 1975, she began exhibiting her paintings and collages of pastoral scenes.[14][16] After turning to houses as subject matter, she attracted greater notice in the 1980s through solo shows at the A.M. Sachs[1][18] and Katharina Rich Perlow[19] galleries in New York and group exhibitions at the McNay Art Museum, Columbus Museum of Art and Minnesota Museum of American Art.[14][2]

In her later career, Dalton Brown has had solo shows at Fischbach Gallery in New York (1987–2014),[20][7][21][3] and Butler Institute of American Art (2018, 2019),[9] and retrospectives at the Springfield Art Museum (1999),[22] Johnson Museum of Art (2013),[23] and My Art Museum (2021, Seoul).[24][25]

Work and reception

Alice Dalton Brown, Blues Come Through, oil on linen, 54" x 86", 1999.

Dalton Brown's work synthesizes various realist tendencies in a manner that evades easy placement within typical modes of contemporary realism or photorealism.[8][7][2] For example, despite using reference photographs, she does not imitate their optical qualities, nor does she derive compositions directly from them, but rather, reconstructs, edits and collages reality freely to suit her purposes.[8][26][21] Similarly, her painterly treatments of foliage, water and floorboards, eccentric compositional rhythms and perspectives, and level of psychological and emotional content introduce expressionist qualities at odds with more conventional realism.[8][27][2] Art historian April Kingsley compares Dalton Brown's approach to those of Richard Estes and Edward Hopper, deeming her a "subjective realist."[2] In addition to Hopper's influence, writers have cited Post-Impressionists such as Gaugin, Bonnard, Vuillard and van Gogh, the Dutch Old Masters, the 19th-century American sublime tradition, the American Precisionists, and Josef Albers (for his theories of color structure), as significant to her work.[2][28][6]

Dalton Brown selects subjects such as houses and porches, barns, water and curtains for their evocative qualities regarding memory, the unconscious, identity and reality.[27][17][29] Her contrasting surfaces and textures and captured ephemeral phenomena (light, wind, water) play up these aspects, as well as various oppositions: home and outside world, open and closed, soft and hard, solid or reflected form, obscured and visible, movement and stasis, order and disorder.[26][15] She furthers these effects by omitting people and furniture from her scenes so that viewers can fully occupy the spaces;[27][22][17] critics suggest that this pristine, vacant quality imbues the paintings with an almost surreal sense of mystery.[8][28][26] Some writers have traced a chronological, physical and psychological trajectory in the evolution of Dalton Brown's work: from façade to porch to interior, then out windows and onto transcendent expanses of water.[8][29]

"Barn" works (1965–77)

Between 1965 and 1977, Dalton Brown produced paintings and drawings of barns and silos, created "using photographic collage and the filters of artistic sensibility and memory" according to reviews.[21][5] New York Sun critic David Grosz described her approach as "an art of archetypes, not particularities" which imparted "a quiet iconic aura" on its subject through simplified blocks of solid color interrupted by the play of sunlight and shadow.[21] Over time, this work became increasingly abstract, as in the painting Shadow of Tree and Table (1977), a red barn façade framed in perpendicular white beams and slats and marked with amorphous crimson shadows with a red picnic table in front, visible only by its darker shadows; reviews compared such frontal flattening of space to the Cubist-informed representations of Charles Sheeler and Georgia O'Keeffe.[8][2][5]

Alice Dalton Brown, Pool: Tropical Reflections, oil on linen, 50" x 105", 1989.

House paintings (1977–94)

In 1977, an empty country house in Westfield, New York caught Dalton Brown's attention and became the focus of a number of works, initiating a major new motif in her work: Victorian houses, viewed from outside and often expressive of a longing to be inside that some have variably regarded as feminist or Freudian.[8][2] She was initially faithful to the observed time, place and season, but gradually moved toward compositions that didn't exist in reality by combining elements from different locations, perspectives or moments in time and variations in light, proportion and cropping.[1][15] In some works, she painted fuller scenes, as in the eleven-foot-wide, largely white Grand Westfield Porch (1980); a frontal, partial façade of irregular archways, slender columns and decorative carved screens seemingly dislocated by a trick of perspective, it doubled as a study in geometric abstraction.[8][30] In other works, she homed in on details—an arched window, a few steps, or part of a porch, as in the Kathy's Room series (1983).[2]

The house paintings often focused on border or threshold spaces—gates, windows and porches that bridge inside and outside, public and private, and senses of beauty, threat or chaos. Such spaces enable Dalton Brown to explore different textures (e.g., architecture vs. foliage), hard and soft forms, and how plays of light (in shadows, reflections or on actual forms) can reveal objects in multiple ways.[27][1][19] Beginning in the latter 1980s, she introduced a new intensity to this work—both coloristically and compositionally—that celebrated the vibrancy and unruliness of nature.[22][31][32] These works depicted both northern and sun-drenched, semi-tropical settings and often featured dappled foliage, intricate patterns of shadow, reflections and pools, and brightly colored walls (e.g., Tropical Shadows, 1988; Pool: Tropical Reflection, 1989; Dappled Pink, 1992).[20][2][6]

Alice Dalton Brown, Autumn Reverie, oil on linen, 75" x 107", 1998.

"Summer Breeze" and water series (1995– )

In the mid-1990s, Dalton Brown shifted her perspective, with scenes from inside houses looking out, most characteristically with through open windows whose diaphanous, windblown curtains enlivened otherwise still, bare rooms with an implied human presence.[7][22][33][29] Paintings with lake scenes, such as Summer Breeze (1995), Blues Come Through. (1999) and Whisper (2001), emphasized an active play of light, shadow and geometry on curtains, walls, floors and water through reflection, refraction and distortion.[22][26][34][35] Art in America critic Gerrit Henry described them as works of eternal summer, "crystal clear in their psychological pantheism" with "a glistening apprehension of sun and weather" and an eye for the extraordinary amid the everyday.[6] With works such as the elegiac Autumn Reverie (1998), Dalton Brown's emphasis shifted to the house's architecture and the varying visual effects created by windows, in that case within an elaborately conjoined triptych-like structure of transitional passage consisting of porch, doorway and interior.[31][8]

In later, blue-dominated paintings of the sea, Dalton Brown often placed viewers right over the water in otherworldly compositions that excluded any framing devices, grounded only by barely present kite- or sail-like curtains (e.g., Nor Earth nor Boundless Sea, 2011).[28][8] Her exhibition, "Nocturnes and Diurnes" (Fischbach, 2010), featured twelve paintings of shimmering waves that captured moments moving from morning to night.[3][17] In a 2014 essay, art historian Maryan Ainsworth compared the effects of Dalton Brown's water paintings to the carefully constructed compositions and invented worlds of Dutch Old Master painters in terms of observational acuity, process and effects; she described the complex, opposing emotional responses they evoked— both liberation and loss of security—as moments "eternally there and eternally changing."[28]

Dalton Brown's "Italy" series (2015–19) was initiated while she was a visiting artist at the American Academy in Rome. Its pastels and oil works focus on the warm light and textures of the area's everyday landscapes with views from both inside (through windows) and outside various villas.[29][16][25] In 2021, My Art Museum in Seoul presented a retrospective of eighty Dalton Brown artworks, "Where the Light Breathes," which included three commissioned "Summer Breeze" paintings: "In the Quiet Moment," "Expectation" and "Lifting Light" (all 2021).[24][15]

Museum collections

Dalton Brown's work belongs to the public collections of the Allen Memorial Art Museum,[36] Asheville Art Museum, Butler Institute of American Art, Johnson Museum of Art,[11] Frost Art Museum, Maier Museum of Art,[37] Metropolitan Museum of Art,[10] Minneapolis Institute of Art,[12] New York Public Library, Springfield Art Museum,[26] Tampa Museum of Art, and Telfair Museums, among others, as well as to corporate, university and private collections.[9][2]

Exhibition catalogues and books

References

  1. ^ a b c d Henry, Gerrit. "Alice Dalton Brown," ARTnews, November 1983, p. 207.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Kingsley, April. The Paintings of Alice Dalton Brown, New York/Manchester, VT: Hudson Hills Press, 2002. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  3. ^ a b c Gladstone, Valerie. "Alice Dalton Brown," ARTnews, Summer 2010.
  4. ^ Cooper, James. "Beautiful Flame Burns Under Brown’s Victorian Facade," New York Tribune, March 6, 1987.
  5. ^ a b c d Cristiano, Joshua. "Alice Dalton Brown," ARTnews, December 2006, p. 152.
  6. ^ a b c d Henry, Gerrit. "Alice Dalton Brown at Fischbach," Art in America, July 2003, p. 96.
  7. ^ a b c d Bell, J. Bowyer. "Alice Dalton Brown at Fischbach Gallery," Review, April 15, 1995, p. 35–36.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Whitman, Arthur. "The Realist Paintings of Alice Dalton Brown," The Ithaca Times, July 3–9, 2013, p. 13. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  9. ^ a b c Butler Institute of American Art. Alice Dalton Brown: Pastels, Portfolio. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  10. ^ a b The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Small Golden Corner, Alice Dalton Brown, Art Collection. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  11. ^ a b Johnson Museum of Art. Retreat Grasses, Alice Dalton Brown, Objects. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  12. ^ a b Minneapolis Institute of Art. A Sheltered Spot, Alice Dalton Brown, Collections. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  13. ^ Peekskill Arts Alliance. Alice Dalton Brown, Artist. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  14. ^ a b c d Heller, Jules and Nancy G. Heller. North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary, New York: Taylor & Francis, 2013. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  15. ^ a b c d Lee, Jangro. "Alice Dalton Brown Where the light Breathes," Weverse Magazine, September 24, 2021. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  16. ^ a b c d e Shin, Miri , Bora Kim and James Mullen. Alice Dalton Brown: Where the Light Breathes, Seoul: My Art Museum, 2021.
  17. ^ a b c d Goldsmith, Margie and Richard Mathews. "Making Miracles of Light and Shadow: An Interview with Alice Dalton Brown," Tampa Review No. 40, 2010, p. 15–17.
  18. ^ Cooper, James. "New Exhibit at Sachs shows Alice Dalton Brown," New York Tribune, June 29, 1984.
  19. ^ a b Gill, Susan. "Alice Dalton Brown," Arts, November 1985, p. 122.
  20. ^ a b Kimmelman, Michael. "Review/Museums," The New York Times, May 5, 1989. p. C28. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  21. ^ a b c d Grosz, David. "Alice Dalton Brown: Barns 1965–1976," The New York Sun, September 21, 2006, p .19.
  22. ^ a b c d e Howell, Camille. "Light, life spill from Brown's artwork," The Springfield News-Leader, October 29, 1999.
  23. ^ Johnson Museum of Art. "Summer Breeze: Paintings & Drawings by Alice Dalton Brown," Exhibitions. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  24. ^ a b Park, Han-sol. "Light breathes life into Alice Dalton Brown’s canvas," Korea Times, August 27, 2021. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  25. ^ a b My Art Museum. "Alice Dalton Brown, Where the Light Breathes," Exhibits. Retrieved January 11, 2023.
  26. ^ a b c d e Diggory, Anne. "Layers of Clarity and Ambiguity," American Artist, October 2001, p. 40–47.
  27. ^ a b c d Howard, Henrietta. "Private Views: Inside and Outside," House & Garden (UK ed.), January 1991, p. 88–89.
  28. ^ a b c d Ainsworth, Maryan. "The Illusion of Reality in Alice Dalton Brown's Paintings," Alice Dalton Brown: The Language of Angels, New York: Fischbach Gallery, 2014.
  29. ^ a b c d Carey, Brainard. "Points of Light," Praxis Center for Aesthetics, September 6, 2018. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  30. ^ Cooper, James F. "Alice Dalton Brown," New York Tribune, May 13, 1983. p. 6B.
  31. ^ a b Kingsley, April. "The Clear Light of Alice Dalton Brown," Alice Dalton Brown: Interior Spaces – Exterior Light, Springfield, MO: Springfield Art Museum, 1999. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  32. ^ Cooper, James. "Enchanted Sanctuary: Alice Dalton Brown," American Arts Quarterly, Spring 2000, p. 3–7.
  33. ^ Thomas. "Fashionable Art," Washington Examiner, December 9, 2002. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  34. ^ The Tampa Review. "Alice Dalton Brown," No. 22, 2001, p 4.
  35. ^ Cooper, James. "Alice Dalton Brown," American Arts Quarterly, Spring 2004, p. 60.
  36. ^ Allen Memorial Art Museum. Rome #9, From my Window, American Academy in Rome, Alice Dalton Brown, Art Collection. Retrieved January 10, 2023.
  37. ^ Maier Museum of Art. Alice Dalton Brown, Collections. Retrieved January 10, 2023.

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