Archives intern Molly McBride Jacobson digs into unsorted family photographs from the Woodman Family Foundation Archives, 2021
Archives intern Molly McBride Jacobson digs into unsorted family photographs from our archives
The Woodman Family Foundation Archives include boxes and boxes of family photographs, spanning the early days George and Betty spent in Albuquerque where they welcomed their son Charlie into the world; to their move to a modernist home in Boulder—the site of many birthday parties, pottery sales, impromptu installations of paintings and Francesca’s earliest experiments with “dress up;” until just a few years ago enjoying breakfast with their grandson Alexander in both New York and Antella.
Francesca Woodman. Contact sheet, c. 1977-78. 8 x 10 in. Gelatin silver print © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
IN CONVERSATION: "Francesca Woodman: Alternate Stories" on Yale Radio with Lissa McClure and Brainard Carey, 2021
Our Executive Director Lissa McClure was recently in conversation with Brainard Carey on Yale Radio about Francesca Woodman’s upcoming solo exhibition “Francesca Woodman: Alternate Stories” at Marian Goodman Gallery, New York. They spoke about the inclusion of never-before-seen photographs and Woodman's own writings about her work, her compositional and conceptual grounding, and this exciting opportunity to view the work through new lenses.
Betty Woodman. Installation view and details, "Alessandro’s Rooms," 2011. 102.5 x 354.5 x 15.75 in. Glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, acrylic paint, canvas © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Betty Woodman. "Alessandro’s Rooms," 2011. 102.5 x 354.5 x 15.75 in. Glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, acrylic paint, canvas © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
ON VIEW: Betty Woodman in "The Flames: The Age of Ceramics" at Musee d'Art Moderne de Paris, Paris, France, 2021
"The Flames" takes a transhistorical approach to ceramics to assert the critical relationship of clay to both art and humankind. The exhibition combines ancient objects dating back to the Neolithic with those made by contemporary artists—including Betty Woodman—and everything in between.
Francesca Woodman. "Untitled," 1978, 8 3/8 x 8 9/16 in. Gelatin silver print © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
ON VIEW: Francesca Woodman in “New Time: Art and Feminisms in the 21st Century” at BAMPFA, Berkeley, California, 2021
This ambitious survey of recent feminist practices in contemporary art begins with Lucy Lippard’s observation that feminist art is “a value system, a revolutionary strategy, a way of life.” While the majority of works on view were made in the first two decades of this century, highlighting the wide-ranging concerns and multiple perspectives of contemporary artists, influential works made by artists of earlier generations are also featured, including three photographs by Francesca Woodman.
Envelope for letter from George Woodman in Boulder, Colorado to Francesca Woodman in Rome, Italy, October 19, 1977. Woodman Family Foundation Archives.
Betty Woodman, Francesca Woodman, and George Woodman in “Interior Scroll or What I Did on My Vacation” at S&S Corner Shop, The Art Building, Springs, New York, 2021
We are pleased to announce that this exhibition includes a selection of correspondence written between Betty, Francesca and George Woodman in 1978, as well as Francesca Woodman’s “Selected Video Works,” 1976-1978.
L to R: Installation view, “Rincontrarsi a Venezia,” Spazio Berlendis, Venice, Italy, 2021, including “Untitled,” 1980. 101.93 x 36.62 in. Diazotype / "Self-Deceit #2,” 1978, from the "Self-Deceit" series, 3 9/16 x 3 1/4 in. / “Self-Deceit #7,” 1978, from the "Self-Deceit" series. 3 5/8 x 3 9/16 in. All gelatin silver prints. All works by Francesca Woodman © Woodman Family Foundation / SIAE, Rome
Installation view, “Rincontrarsi a Venezia,” Spazio Berlendis, Venice, Italy, 2021. Artwork by Francesca Woodman © Woodman Family Foundation / SIAE, Rome
Francesca Woodman in “Rincontrarsi a Venezia” at Spazio Berlendis, Venice, Italy, 2021
LAST CHANCE TO SEE Francesca Woodman in Rincontrarsi a Venezia at Spazio Berlendis, Venice, Italy. On view through July 17, 2021.
Betty Woodman. “Shelf and Vase: Zante,” 1985. 31 x 21 x 9 in. Glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, acrylic paint © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Betty Woodman in “With Pleasure: Pattern and Decoration in American Art 1972-1985” at Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York, 2021
This ambitious exhibition, curated by Anna Katz, brings together American artists, including Betty Woodman, associated with the Pattern and Decoration movement in the first such comprehensive and scholarly survey. The exhibition showcases painting, sculpture, collage, ceramics, installation and performance which embraced craft-based and decorative traditions and approached art-making from a sometimes dizzying appreciation of historic sources and feminist aesthetics.
L to R: George Woodman’s exhibition brochure, Boulder Center for the Visual Arts, Boulder, CO, Fall 1981 | Reviews in the Daily Camera and Rocky Mountain News, October 1981. Woodman Family Foundation Archives.
George Woodman’s exhibition brochure, Boulder Center for the Visual Arts, Boulder, Colorado, Fall 1981. Woodman Family Foundation Archives.
George Woodman at the Boulder Center for the Visual Arts, Boulder, Colorado, Fall 1981
George Woodman’s exhibition at the Boulder Center for the Visual Arts in the fall of 1981 was a survey of his various approaches to pattern over 15 years, ranging from his complex tessellations, to the use of pattern to unify a surface, to a rigorous examination of the decorative, and finally to the all-encompassing perceptual experience of his room-scaled paper tile installations.
Francesca Woodman. "#1" or "House #1" or "Abandoned House," 1976, from the "Abandoned House" series, 4 15/16 x 5 116 in. Gelatin silver print. Collection of the Addison © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Francesca Woodman in "Learning to Look: The Addison at 90" at the Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts, 2021
The Addison has a long and important history with Francesca Woodman. It was the first institution to collect her work, purchasing six of her photographs in 1976. She had her first solo exhibition there that same year, including works she made while studying at Rhode Island School of Design.
L to R: "Untitled," 1978 | Invitation by Francesca Woodman | Installation views, Woods-Gerry Gallery, RISD, 1978 / Review by David K. Miller, 1978. Woodman Family Foundation Archives
Invitation by Francesca Woodman, 1978 © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Francesca Woodman's BFA graduate exhibition at Woods-Gerry Hall Gallery, RISD, 1978
Francesca Woodman’s graduate exhibition as a student at the Rhode Island School of Design was held at the school’s Woods-Gerry Gallery in November 1978. She considered it a “swan song” to her time there as shown in her photocopied invitation. She reported on the opening in a letter to her friend Edith Schloss: “you would have enjoyed it i bought all these bird whistles that one fills with water and they warble in n.y. do you remember them from when you used to live there? anyway the room was very echoey with these things and i actually enjoyed the opening.”
L to R: “1+1=2” exhibition catalogue, 1984 | Review of “1+1=2” show in “The New York Times,” February 17, 1984. Woodman Family Foundation Archives.
"1+1=2" exhibition catalogue, 1984. Woodman Family Foundation Archives.
Betty and George Woodman in "1+1=2" exhibition at Bernice Steinbaum Gallery, 1984
In 1984, following a series of exhibitions at PS1 dedicated to “Art Couples,” art historian and critic Donald Kuspit organized "1 + 1 = 2" at Bernice Steinbaum Gallery in Manhattan. The exhibition paired the work of 31 artist couples and acknowledged a long-overdue cultural shift in recognizing women artists as peers to their male counterparts. Betty Woodman and George Woodman—included in the exhibition and married for more than thirty years at that point—often credited their mutual respect for and support of each other as artists as the bedrock of their marriage.
Betty Woodman. Presenting Food, 1985. Installation views at the Fabric Workshop, New York. First image courtesy Fabric Workshop and Museum.
Betty Woodman. "Presenting Food," 1985. Installation view at the Fabric Workshop, New York. Courtesy Fabric Workshop and Museum.
Betty Woodman's "Presenting Food" at The Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1985
“Presenting Food,” 1985, marked Betty Woodman’s second project with the Fabric Workshop and Museum and a farewell to her work as a functional potter. For this dinner-performance event, held at the museum’s New York City gallery space, Woodman responded to chef Daniel Mattroce’s menu with her signature ceramic dinnerware and serving dishes, accompanied by fabrics she designed and printed at FWM’s Philadelphia studios. Woodman later recounted: “These are my last functional pieces, ‘presented’ like the food in an almost operatic finale.”















