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Jay DeFeo
A Retrospective
February 28–June 2, 2013
Whitney Museum of American Art, New York
whitney.org
This retrospective is the definitive exhibition to date of the work of Jay DeFeo. At the outset of her career, in the 1950s, DeFeo was at the center of a vibrant community of Beat artists, poets, and musicians in San Francisco. Although she is best known for her monumental painting The Rose (1958–66), which she spent eight years making, DeFeo created an astoundingly diverse range of works spanning four decades. Her unconventional approach to materials and intensive, physical process make DeFeo a unique figure in postwar American art who defies easy categorization. The full breadth of her work is presented for the first time in this exhibition of more than 130 objects. The astonishing array of collages, drawings, paintings, photographs, small sculptures, and jewelry on view illuminate DeFeo’s courageous experimentation and extraordinary vision. This exhibition has traveled from the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art.
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Jay DeFeo, Untitled (Salvador Dalí’s Birthday Party), May 11, 1973, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York © 2020 The Jay DeFeo Foundation/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Photo: Sheldan C. Collins
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