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L to R: “Untitled,” c. 1977-78, 8 x 8 1/16 in. | “Untitled,” 1977, 5 5/16 x 5 3/8 in. | Installation view from ““Blur / Obscure / Distort: Photography and Perception,” Norton Museum of Art, West Palm Beach, Florida, 2025. Photo courtesy Norton Museum of Art. All gelatin silver prints. All artworks by Francesca Woodman © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
Francesca Woodman. “Untitled,” c. 1977-78, 8 x 8 1/16 in. Gelatin silver print © Woodman Family Foundation / Bildupphovsrätt i Sverige, Stockholm
NOW ON VIEW: Francesca Woodman in "The Subterranean Sky: Surrealism in the Moderna Museet Collection" and “Blur / Obscure / Distort: Photography and Perception”

Works by Francesca Woodman are currently on view in two museum exhibitions about Surrealism and photography's relationship with truth at the Moderna Museet and Norton Museum of Art, respectively.

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L to R: Betty Woodman with “Roman Windows” and totebag made at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, PA, 2006. Woodman Family Foundation Archives. | Betty Woodman. "Roman Windows," 2006, 35 1/4 x 87 x 8 1/2 in. Glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer and paint. Betty Woodman's studio, New York, New York, c. 2006. Artworks by Betty Woodman © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Betty Woodman with “Roman Windows” and totebag made at the Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, PA, 2006. Woodman Family Foundation Archives. Artworks by Betty Woodman © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Happy birthday to Betty Woodman

Happy birthday to Betty Woodman, born on this day in 1930. Known for her bold and exuberant colors in both art and self presentation, she is pictured here playfully dressed like her own sculpture “Roman Windows,” draped in a vivid yellow that echoes her sunlit New York City studio.

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CLOSING Saturday, May 3: "George Woodman: A Democracy of Parts, Paintings 1966-1978," DC Moore Gallery, 2025

This week is your last chance to see George Woodman: A Democracy of Parts, Paintings 1966-1978, an exhibition tracing the development of Woodman’s singular approach to pattern and color over a series of paintings rarely shown in New York in more than 40 years.

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L to R: 1, 15: George Woodman, installation view of "George Woodman: Paintings 1962-1963," Henderson Gallery, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado | 2, 6, 10, 12-13: Installation view of "George Woodman: Paintings 1962-1963," Henderson Gallery, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado | 3: “End of the Alphabet,” c. 1963, 52 x 52 in. | 4: “The Magic Box,” c. 1963, 55 x 45 in. | 5: “Landscape (After the Death of Adonis),” 1963, 72 x 72 in. | 7: “Untitled,” c. 1962-63, dimensions unknown. | 8: “Cleopatra (With Asp),” c. 1963, 48 x 51 in. | 9: “April Cool” or “Buddhist Shrine” or “Diamond Gestalt,” 1963, 70 x 70 in. | 11: “Love is a Bridge,” c. 1963, 52 x 52 in. | 14: “Mid-West Landscape (With Fallout)," 1963, 48 x 80 in. All oil on canvas. All artworks by George Woodman © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. Woodman Family Foundation Archives.
George Woodman, installation view of "George Woodman: Paintings 1962-1963," Henderson Gallery, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado. Woodman Family Foundation Archives.
George Woodman in "George Woodman: Paintings 1962-1963," Henderson Gallery, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado

In December of 1963, George Woodman opened an exhibition of his recent paintings at the Henderson Gallery at University of Colorado, Boulder, where he also taught painting and philosophy of art. These paintings—made in 1962 and 1963—moved away from the loose abstraction he had previously applied to painting the landscape and towards an approach that recalled maps and aerial views.

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L to R: 1-3, 5, 6: Installation views, “An Interior Exchanged,” Fashion Institute of Technology, New York, New York, 1982. Woodman Family Foundation Archives | 4: Spread from “Wallpapers for Historic Buildings” by Richard C. Nylander, The Preservation Press, Washington, D.C., 1983 | 7: Betty Woodman, “Cloistered Arbor Room,” 1981, 10 x 23 ft. Glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, fabric. Installation view from “The Elizabeth Reed Keller Memorial Exhibition: Ceramics,” Suzanne Lemberg Usdan Gallery, Bennington College, Bennington, Vermont, 1981 | 8: Betty Woodman, “Bedroom with Lattice,” 2009, 92 x 85 x 15 in. Glazed earthenware, paint, canvas | 9: Spread from “Pompei ercolano stabile oplontis: le città sepolte dal Vesuvio” by Pietro Giovanni Guzzo, Electa Napoli, Italy, 2003 | 10: Betty Woodman, “Villa Oplontis,” 2006, 45 x 121 x 11 in. Terra sigillata, canvas, glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, wood | 11: Betty Woodman, “Il Giardino Dipinto,” 1993, 9 x 35 ft. Glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, paint. Installation view from “Betty Woodman: Il Giardino Dipinto,” Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence, Rhode Island, 2005 | 12: Selected books on wall paintings, wallpapers, and architecture from Betty Woodman’s collection | 13: Betty Woodman, “Wallpaper 11,” 2016, 120 x 144 in. Glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, acrylic paint. All Betty Woodman artworks © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York
Installation view, “An Interior Exchanged,” Fashion Institute of Technology, New York, New York, 1982. Woodman Family Foundation Archives
Betty Woodman's collaboration with Cynthia Carlson and her pivot to the wall

In the spring of 1981, Betty Woodman and Cynthia Carlson started planning for “An Interior Exchanged,” an environmental collaboration presented in ARTISANSPACE at the Fashion Institute of Technology in 1982.

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Installation views of "Francesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron: Portraits to Dream In," National Portrait Gallery, London, 2024. Images courtesy and copyright National Portrait Gallery.
CLOSING Sunday, June 16: "Francesca Woodman and Julia Margaret Cameron: Portraits to Dream In," National Portrait Gallery, 2024

It’s your last chance to see “Portraits to Dream In,” beautifully installed to recall the period from cool, blue dusk to warm, rosy dawn and reflect what curator Magdalene Keaney describes as “the dream space” shared by both Woodman's and Cameron’s photographs.

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Installation videos of Francesca Woodman's "Blueprint for a Temple (II)," Gagosian, New York

"Installation of Francesca Woodman's Blueprint for a Temple (II)" and "Time-lapse of Francesca Woodman's Blueprint for a Temple (II)" for Francesca Woodman, Gagosian, New York, March 13–April 27, 2024.

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L to R: Francesca Woodman. "Blueprint for a Temple (II)," 1980, 171 1/2 x 125 in. Diazotype collage with gelatin silver prints. © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York. / Images 2-3: Detail of "Blueprint for a Temple (II)," 1980 / Installation view of “Francesca Woodman,” Gagosian Gallery, New York, 2024
Francesca Woodman. "Blueprint for a Temple (II)," 1980, 171 1/2 x 125 in. Diazotype collage with gelatin silver prints. © Woodman Family Foundation / Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York.
"Blueprint for a Temple (II)": Francesca Woodman. "Francesca Woodman," Gagosian, New York

"Blueprint for a Temple (II)," one of the largest and most ambitious of Francesca Woodman’s works, is on view for the first time in 44 years at Gagosian Gallery.

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L to R: All images George Woodman, ceramic tile installation, 1984, Delavan-Canisius College Station, NFTA-Metro, Buffalo, NY.
George Woodman, ceramic tile installation, 1984, Delavan-Canisius College Station, NFTA-Metro, Buffalo, NY.
George Woodman's ceramic tile installation, 1984, Delavan-Canisius College Station, NFTA-Metro, Buffalo, NY: From the Archives...

In 1984, George Woodman’s first public commission in ceramic tile was installed in the Delavan-Canisius NFTA-Metro station in Buffalo, New York. Three walls in the station’s mezzanine—measuring 11 feet high by 72 feet long in total—are still today covered in pattern made from 8 inch square tiles, greeting riders as they pass from the trains to the street.

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L to R: All artworks by Francesca Woodman. 1 & 3: Installation view, MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, New Hampshire, 1980 / "Study for Tree Piece,” New York, c. 1980. 14 1/2 x 15 1/4 in. Diazotype / 4-5: “Untitled,” MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, New Hampshire, 1980. 2 13/16 x 9 15/16 in. Gelatin silver print. Letter on reverse of print / “Untitled,” MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, New Hampshire, 1980. 11 x 14 in. Gelatin silver print.
Francesca Woodman. Installation view, MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, New Hampshire, 1980.
Francesca Woodman, MacDowell Colony, Peterborough, New Hampshire, 1980: From the Archives...

Francesca Woodman spent three weeks in July of 1980 on a fellowship at the MacDowell Colony, surrounded by other artists, as well as musicians, poets, novelists and the forests of rural New Hampshire. She arrived there from New York, already thinking about trees.

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