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Artist: Eve Peri
Abstract Mexican Era Composition
By Eve Peri
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Beautiful 1945 painting by American artist, Eve Peri. Watercolor on tissue paper, image measures 18 x 14 inches; 20.5 x 24.5 inches matted behind scratched plexiglass. Artwork and ma...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Eve Peri Art

Materials

Watercolor

Untitled Abstract Expressionist composition
By Eve Peri
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Beautiful ca. 1955 oil painting by American artist, Eve Peri. Oil on illustration board, panel measures 10 x 15 inches; 15.75 x 20.75 inches framed. Signed lower left. Excellent condition. Vintage...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Eve Peri Art

Materials

Oil, Illustration Board

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Previously Available Items
Abstract Mexican Era Composition
By Eve Peri
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Beautiful ca. 1930s painting by American artist, Eve Peri. Watercolor on tissue paper, image measures 8.75 x 10.5 inches; 16 x 17.5 inches in period frame. Excellent condition. Unsigned. Estate stamp on back side. EVE PERI (1897-1966) Born in Bangor, Maine, Eve Peri worked predominantly as an abstract fiber collage artist, creating embroidered compositions, wash drawings and paintings. A modernist who favored rich patterns and organic forms, Peri cut and assembled found textiles gathered from travels around the world. She lived and worked in New York, Mexico and Philadelphia with extended stays in London, Lisbon, Paris, and Rome. At a very young age, Peri learned embroidery, appliqué, stitching and quiltmaking techniques from her mother and aunts. As an artist working with these skills and as a designer with her second husband, the Columbian painter Alfonso Umana Mendez, she produced hand woven fabrics for interiors, theater and fashion. Although her visibility was eclipsed in the decades since her death, there is now a renewed interest in her art as a result of recent exhibitions at the Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York. SELECTED MUSEUM COLLECTIONS Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy...
Category

Mid-20th Century Abstract Eve Peri Art

Materials

Watercolor

Head in Profile (cubist portrait)
By Eve Peri
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Beautiful ca. 1950 mixed media painting by American artist, Eve Peri. Ink and linocut print collage on sandpaper, sheet measures 6.25 x 7 inches. The abstract head in profile is a linocut print created by the artist and glued down into sandpaper. Ink drawing surrounds the collaged piece. Expressionist forms heavily influenced by the work of the New York School c.1940-1950. Excellent condition. Estate stamp on back side. EVE PERI (1897-1966) Born in Bangor, Maine, Eve Peri worked predominantly as an abstract fiber collage artist, creating embroidered compositions, wash drawings and paintings. A modernist who favored rich patterns and organic forms, Peri cut and assembled found textiles gathered from travels around the world. She lived and worked in New York, Mexico and Philadelphia with extended stays in London, Lisbon, Paris, and Rome. At a very young age, Peri learned embroidery, appliqué, stitching and quiltmaking techniques from her mother and aunts. As an artist working with these skills and as a designer with her second husband, the Columbian painter Alfonso Umana Mendez, she produced hand woven fabrics for interiors, theater and fashion. Although her visibility was eclipsed in the decades since her death, there is now a renewed interest in her art as a result of recent exhibitions at the Michael Rosenfeld...
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Rooster ( Mexico embroidery fabric art)
By Eve Peri
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Eve Peri (1897-1966). Rooster, ca. 1935. Embroidered thread on burlap ground mounted to linen backing panel. panel measures 12.75 x 15.75 inches; 18.25 x 21.75 inches in contemporary custom frame with UV glass. Estate stamp affixed to back of panel within display box. Excellent condition with no damage or restoration. Signed lower right. Estate label glued to stretcher bar, verso. Biography: Born in Bangor, Maine, Eve Peri worked predominantly as an abstract fiber collage artist, creating embroidered compositions, wash drawings and paintings. A modernist who favored rich patterns and organic forms, Peri cut and assembled found textiles gathered from travels around the world. She lived and worked in New York, Mexico and Philadelphia with extended stays in London, Lisbon, Paris, and Rome. At a very young age, Peri learned embroidery, appliqué, stitching and quiltmaking techniques from her mother and aunts. As an artist working with these skills and as a designer with her second husband, the Columbian painter Alfonso Umana Mendez, she produced hand woven fabrics for interiors, theater and fashion. Although her visibility was eclipsed in the decades since her death, there is now a renewed interest in her art as a result of recent exhibitions at the Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York. SELECTED MUSEUM COLLECTIONS Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery, The University of Maryland Baltimore County, MD American Craft Museum, New York, NY Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, ME Comfort Gallery, Haverford College, Haverford, PA Cooper Hewitt Museum, New York, NY The Cooper Union, New York, NY Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, ME Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME The Women’s Museum, Washington, DC Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT AWARDS 1951 American Institute of Decorators, 1951 Citation of Merit 1952 Women in Art, Houston, TX SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 1937 Delphic Gallery, New York, NY 1942 Tommi Parzinger, New York, NY 1948 Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA 1948 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Gallery E, Philadelphia Art Alliance, Philadelphia, PA 1950 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Hacker Gallery, New York, NY 1952 Everhart Museum, Scranton, OH Germantown Friends Library, Philadelphia, PA 1956 Watson and Bowler, Chicago, IL Thelma Tichenor, San Francisco, CA 1963 Pitture di Eve Peri, Galleria Anthea, Rome, Italy 1965 J. Walter Thompson Gallery, New York, NY; 1966 1982 Eve Peri: A Retrospective, Lawrence Oliver Gallery, Philadelphia, PA 1991 Eve Peri: A Retrospective in Painting, Collage and Fabric, Comfort Gallery, Haverford College, Haverford, PA 1996 Eve Peri, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY Eve Peri: A Modernist Spirit, Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery, The University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 2004 Eve Peri: Fiber Artist, Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, ME SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 1937 The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH 1939 Contemporary Decorative Art, The Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, OH 1940 Architectural League, New York, NY 1948 Miscellaneous Textiles, Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA 1949 An Exhibition for Modern Living, The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI 1951 Alter Ego: Masks: Their Use and Art, The Cooper Union, New York, NY 1952 Women in Art, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, TX Hotel el Panama, Panama 1957 Second Invitational Craft Exhibit, Art Center Association Gallery, Louisville, KY Wall Hangings and Rugs, The Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York, NY 1958 Contemporary Wall Hangings, American Federation of Arts Traveling Exhibition Services (traveling exhibition) 1962 Gallerie d’Aubusson, Paris, France Little Gallery, Philadelphia, PA 1963 Little Gallery, Philadelphia, PA 1966 Creative Contemporary Embroidery, Old Westbury Gardens, Long Island, NY 1995 Collage: Made in America, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY 1996 Fiber and Form: The Woman’s Legacy, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY Craft in the Machine Age: The History of Twentieth Century American Craft, 1920-1945, American Craft Museum, New York, NY 1999 Unrecognized Talent, Lee Findlay, Jr., New York, NY 2000 Michael Rosenfeld Gallery: The First Decade, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY CHRONOLOGY 1897 Born in Bangor, Maine to George Perry and Minnie Alpine. There was an early marriage and divorce. No records are available. 1931 Lived in Mexico with her second husband Alfonso Umana Mendez, a designer for Fred Leighton. Attended dinner party in Tiaquepaque, near Guadaldjara with guests including Witter Byner and John McAndrews, formerly of Museum of Modern Art. Expressed active interest in Matisse. 1939 Exhibited embroidered textiles in Contemporary Decorative Art at The Toledo Museum of Art in Toledo, OH. Exhibition catalogue illustrated Walk after the Rain, an embroidered tapestry. 1939 Divorced Umana. 1939 Passport issued c/o American Express, Paris. Living at 48 East 9th Street, New York, NY. 1939 Paris. In Paris, Peri first experimented with combining fabrics with her embroidery works. 1939 Lisbon. 1942 Passport renewed. 1946-50, 52, 53 Lived at 61 Park Avenue, New York, NY. 1948 Miscellaneous Textiles, Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA; group exhibition with Ethel Beam, Florence Satsman exhibiting 27 works by Peri. Two exhibitions grouped under the same title: Silk Prints manufactured by the Onondaga Silk Company along with the American paintings on which they were based and an exhibition showcasing projects from various schools done by students of all ages. 1948 Studio visit with Alexander Kostellow, chair of Industrial Design Department at Pratt Institute, who then writes an essay on Peri’s work for her solo exhibition at the Philadelphia Art Alliance. 1948-49 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Gallery E, Philadelphia Art Alliance, Philadelphia, PA. 1949 Saved Thomas Mann’s article on Goethe. 1949 An Exhibition for Modern Living, The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI; exhibition catalogue illustrated by Saul Steinberg. Peri’s address listed in Index of Exhibitors under “Textiles”; Eve Peri, 61 Park Avenue, New York 16, New York. 1949 Attended Miro show at the Pierre Matisse Gallery. Quoted Matisse “The purer the colors, the stronger they act on the deepest feelings.” 1950 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Hacker Gallery, New York, NY; reviewed in Art Digest, May 1950 by Doris Brian. Exhibited abstract, unframed wall hangings and such decorative objects as couch cushions. Second review, Art News, May 1950, p. 50, initialed A.R.; notes “Genesis” and price range of $200-$450. Third review, The New York Times, April 18, 1950; highlights “Red Space” 1951 American Institute of Decorators, 1951 Citation of Merit; given for abstract machine embroidery and appliqué on fabric; article by Betty Pepis, “Trial by Jury,” The New York Times Magazine, March 23, 1952. All products juried were offered for consumer sale no later than January 1, 1951. Peri was among 12 winners chosen from “several hundred entries.” Article describes jury process and illustrates winning designs. Peri won a citation for “novelties.” “There were six of these [citations], and they were commended by the judges as much for their originality of concept as for their excellence of design.” 1952 Arundell Clarke, New York, NY carries work by Peri including appliquéd fabric panels ranging in price from $35-$60 a yard; highlighted in the New Yorker, May 10, 1952. 1952 Alter Ego: Masks: Their Use and Art, The Cooper Union, New York, NY; review, “200 Changes of Face,” from unknown magazine. Exhibition included historical masks including examples from the Caroline Islands, South America, Melanesia, Africa, and Alaska. Modern masks included those by Margaret Severn (a Follies dancer), Julio de Diego, James Light (designs for The Great God Brown). Eve Peri is mentioned as follows: “We can only admire the indomitable creative spirit which made Eve Peri concoct the gaily-woven face across the way when confined for a week to a Lisbon hotel with a fierce siege of the hives. [Mask to Hide the Blotches of Hives]. 1952 Hotel el Panama, Panama; two articles from Panama (one in Spanish, one in English). Two week exhibition curated by Orlean Stone, interior decorator and wife of hotel architect Edward D. Stone. The English article from The Panama American – An Independent Daily Newspaper, no date, calls attention to Peri’s “fabric forms”. O. Stone is cited as being “one of the first interior consultants to visit the Isthmus.” 1952 Patricia Long, “Germantown Artist Designs Sculptured Fabrics,” Germantown Courier, Thursday, October 2, 1952, vol. 16, no. 43, pp. 15 and 22; Peri cited as living at 161 West Penn Street. Mentions a mask [A Mask to Hide the Blotches of Hives] that “received favorable mention the Cooper Union Gallery in New York” and that “later, two of four fabrics she designed for interior decoration won prizes at the American Institute of Decorators Show…New York.” Goes on to say that those ‘fabrics were later exhibited at the Good Design Show in Chicago.” Dealers listed: Arundell Clark, New York and Stanley Wollner, Philadelphia. 1952 Saved an article by Elizabeth Bowen. 1953 Saved article on Sean O’Casey. 1953 Women in Art, Contemporary Arts Museum, 302 Dallas Avenue, Houston, Texas; Invitation to members reception and preview of the exhibition illustrates two hand knitting together the following text: “A survey of women’s work, from the United States and abroad, in bookbinding, ceramics, china, cloth, pictures, enamels, encaustics, glass, intarsias, jewelry, lithographs, needlework, painting, plastics, photography, textiles, wallpaper and weaving. The exhibition includes custom made items and designs intended for mass production. May 7th through May 27th.” 1953 Second passport issued. 1956 Watson and Boaler, Chicago, IL; group exhibition with Karl Mann (seed mosaics) and Ruth Asawa (wire sculpture). Peri exhibited appliquéd and embroidered wall hangings, both non-objective and folk-style. Peri worked with “Architectural Stylist” Wanda Norstrom on the reconstruction of new offices for the Pennsylvania Lumbermen’s Mutual Insurance Company in the former Ritz-Carlton Hotel on the southeast corner of Broad and Walnut Streets in Philadelphia. The renovation of the new offices on the second, third and fourth floors was noted for its radical use of color in 3 articles in Philadelphia newspapers. The palette of 38 colors including “sharp blues, gold, lemon yellow, persimmon, green, light orange and the rest” was warmly embraced my the employees. All the articles are careful to note that 80% of the workers were women. 1953-58 Living at East Meehan Avenue, Mount Airy, Philadelphia. 1957 Passport renewed. 1957 Wall Hangings and Rugs, The Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York, NY; Gallery publication lists 16 artists. Peri showed 8 fabric works, 7 hangings and 1 rug. 1957 Switzerland, Netherlands, Belgium, England 1958 Second Invitational Craft Exhibit, Art Center Association Gallery, Louisville, KY; juried exhibition organized by Julia Hamlin Duncan and Nelle Peterson, crafts teachers at The Art Center School. Ten artists exhibited pottery, jewelry, glass, weaving, embroidery, and printed materials. Peri was one of three women (with Madge Friedman and Veda Reed) to exhibit works on fabric. The Exhibition ran through April 5. Peri image used in ad in Louisville Times, March 19, 1958; abstract hand embroidered rug. Mentioned in undated review by Senta Bier, “Art in Kentuckiana” from Louisville paper. 1962 Cancer surgery, Graduate Hospital, Philadelphia. 1961 Re-vaccination, Dr. Sullivan, 1830 Rittenhouse Square. 1961 Third passport issued. 1961 Shipped paintings to Paris form East Meehan Avenue address. 1962 Sold furniture locally. 1962 Living at 167 Avenue Victor Hugo, Paris 16. Lived at 33 rue du Champ de Mars, Paris 7 (received letter from Bell regarding sale of Meehan Avenue property). Traveled to Basel and Dover. 1963 Traveled to London and lived at Villa la Foresteria, via Nomentame 28, Rome. Paintings were shipped to Naples from New York via Cristoforo Columbo. 1963-64 Letters from Galleria Anthea to Eve Peri at 7013 Green Street, Mount Airy, Philadelphia. 1964 Letter to Eve Peri regarding her trip to Rome to see her exhibition at Galleria Anthea. 1964 Letter from Dr. Tuman to Eve Peri at Hotel Condotti, Rome. 1964 At Wilbraham Hotel, London. 1964 Returned to Philadelphia. 1965 Living at 243 Pine Street, Philadelphia. 1966 Moved to 2110 Pine Street, Philadelphia. 1966 J. Walter Thompson Gallery, New York, NY; “Handcrafts of Rare Quality,” Interior Design, February 1966, p. 76. Article outlines Peri’s career and mentions show at Thompson Gallery and lists Wanda Norstrom, 103 West Queen Lane, Philadelphia, as a contact for information regarding Peri. A fabric work, Eden, (part of the Thompson exhibit) and a mosaic, Mole, are illustrated. 1966 Died. Ashes taken to Lisbon by Elizabeth Bullock. 1966 Creative Contemporary Embroidery, Old Westbury Gardens, Long Island, NY; “The Tree” was shown through the courtesy of the Cooper Union Museum. 1982 Eve Peri: A Retrospective, Lawrence Oliver Gallery, Philadelphia, PA; exhibited 36 works of varied media. 1989 Kendall Chew and John Formicola, 725 Carpenter Street, Philadelphia, PA 19147 retained to represent Peri’s work. 1996 Eve Peri: A Modernist Spirit, Albin O.Kuhn Library & Gallery, The University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD; exhibited 43 works of varied media BIBLIOGRAPHY “These Mexican Travel Tips by the Floor Covering Editor Will Keep Going for Some Time.” Unknown source, 1931. Recounts meeting with Umana, Fed Leighton’s designer in Mexico, at the Leighton house in Tlaquepaque and a party there for Witter Bynner, the poet that was attended by John McAndrew (formerly of the Modern Museum) and Eve Peri, “an American designer, [who] told you in vivid phraseology about life in Mexico.” [find copy of entire article and full citation]. “Notations in Needlework,” House & Garden, May 1946. Highlights fabric work. Illustrates in one photograph seven designs including a Mexican Colonial lion and a wall hanging that resembles “The Three Kings,” watercolor on tissue. House Beautiful, August 1946. “A Mexican cock fight seen on her travels inspired New Yorker Eve Peri, needlework artist, to design this self-confident cock, done in a veritable potpourri of stitches on linen for a pillow cover. Although this is an example of painstaking work, the amateur could achieve equally striking effects, for none of the stitches are complicated ones. Its beauty is in its improvisation, its true originality. “Abstract Embroideries,” Harper’s Bazaar, January 1947. “These are the newest expression of Eve Peri’s talent with fabrics. Made to order, they are executed in various techniques. One of the handsomest is an arrangement of grays and browns in many tones and surfaces, appliquéd to an off-white linen ground, with a black yarn rope embroidered over all, as if thrown there. These are worthy of framing, though some designers use them as fabric. Robsjohn-Gibbing has made them into magnificent pillows. Bardsley, Lucinda, “Applique Inspired by the Past,” Woman’s Day, February 1947, pp. 50-51. Commissioned project for new designs by Peri based on “heirloom” holdings of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Peri created drapes and a cushion (based on a 19th-century, New England appliquéd rug...
Category

1930s Eve Peri Art

Materials

Fabric

Desert Flower, Mexico
By Eve Peri
Located in Wilton Manors, FL
Eve Peri (1897-1966). Desert Flower, Mexico, c.1930s. Wool and silk yarn embroidery on linen panel. Panel measures 12.5 x 18 inches. Plexi box measures 14 x 19.75 x 1.25 inches. Minor scratches on vintage plexi box. Estate stamp en verso. Excellent condition with no damage or restoration. Biography: Born in Bangor, Maine, Eve Peri worked predominantly as an abstract fiber collage artist, creating embroidered compositions, wash drawings and paintings. A modernist who favored rich patterns and organic forms, Peri cut and assembled found textiles gathered from travels around the world. She lived and worked in New York, Mexico and Philadelphia with extended stays in London, Lisbon, Paris, and Rome. At a very young age, Peri learned embroidery, appliqué, stitching and quiltmaking techniques from her mother and aunts. As an artist working with these skills and as a designer with her second husband, the Columbian painter Alfonso Umana Mendez, she produced hand woven fabrics for interiors, theater and fashion. Although her visibility was eclipsed in the decades since her death, there is now a renewed interest in her art as a result of recent exhibitions at the Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York. SELECTED MUSEUM COLLECTIONS Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery, The University of Maryland Baltimore County, MD American Craft Museum, New York, NY Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Brunswick, ME Comfort Gallery, Haverford College, Haverford, PA Cooper Hewitt Museum, New York, NY The Cooper Union, New York, NY Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, ME Portland Museum of Art, Portland, ME The Women’s Museum, Washington, DC Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT AWARDS 1951 American Institute of Decorators, 1951 Citation of Merit 1952 Women in Art, Houston, TX SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 1937 Delphic Gallery, New York, NY 1942 Tommi Parzinger, New York, NY 1948 Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA 1948 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Gallery E, Philadelphia Art Alliance, Philadelphia, PA 1950 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Hacker Gallery, New York, NY 1952 Everhart Museum, Scranton, OH Germantown Friends Library, Philadelphia, PA 1956 Watson and Bowler, Chicago, IL Thelma Tichenor, San Francisco, CA 1963 Pitture di Eve Peri, Galleria Anthea, Rome, Italy 1965 J. Walter Thompson Gallery, New York, NY; 1966 1982 Eve Peri: A Retrospective, Lawrence Oliver Gallery, Philadelphia, PA 1991 Eve Peri: A Retrospective in Painting, Collage and Fabric, Comfort Gallery, Haverford College, Haverford, PA 1996 Eve Peri, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY Eve Peri: A Modernist Spirit, Albin O. Kuhn Library & Gallery, The University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD 2004 Eve Peri: Fiber Artist, Farnsworth Art Museum, Rockland, ME SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 1937 The Cleveland Museum of Art, Cleveland, OH 1939 Contemporary Decorative Art, The Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, OH 1940 Architectural League, New York, NY 1948 Miscellaneous Textiles, Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA 1949 An Exhibition for Modern Living, The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI 1951 Alter Ego: Masks: Their Use and Art, The Cooper Union, New York, NY 1952 Women in Art, Contemporary Arts Museum, Houston, TX Hotel el Panama, Panama 1957 Second Invitational Craft Exhibit, Art Center Association Gallery, Louisville, KY Wall Hangings and Rugs, The Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York, NY 1958 Contemporary Wall Hangings, American Federation of Arts Traveling Exhibition Services (traveling exhibition) 1962 Gallerie d’Aubusson, Paris, France Little Gallery, Philadelphia, PA 1963 Little Gallery, Philadelphia, PA 1966 Creative Contemporary Embroidery, Old Westbury Gardens, Long Island, NY 1995 Collage: Made in America, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY 1996 Fiber and Form: The Woman’s Legacy, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY Craft in the Machine Age: The History of Twentieth Century American Craft, 1920-1945, American Craft Museum, New York, NY 1999 Unrecognized Talent, Lee Findlay, Jr., New York, NY 2000 Michael Rosenfeld Gallery: The First Decade, Michael Rosenfeld Gallery, New York, NY EVE PERI (1897-1966) CHRONOLOGY 1897 Born in Bangor, Maine to George Perry and Minnie Alpine. There was an early marriage and divorce. No records are available. 1931 Lived in Mexico with her second husband Alfonso Umana Mendez, a designer for Fred Leighton. Attended dinner party in Tiaquepaque, near Guadaldjara with guests including Witter Byner and John McAndrews, formerly of Museum of Modern Art. Expressed active interest in Matisse. 1939 Exhibited embroidered textiles in Contemporary Decorative Art at The Toledo Museum of Art in Toledo, OH. Exhibition catalogue illustrated Walk after the Rain, an embroidered tapestry. 1939 Divorced Umana. 1939 Passport issued c/o American Express, Paris. Living at 48 East 9th Street, New York, NY. 1939 Paris. In Paris, Peri first experimented with combining fabrics with her embroidery works. 1939 Lisbon. 1942 Passport renewed. 1946-50, 52, 53 Lived at 61 Park Avenue, New York, NY. 1948 Miscellaneous Textiles, Addison Gallery of American Art, Phillips Academy, Andover, MA; group exhibition with Ethel Beam, Florence Satsman exhibiting 27 works by Peri. Two exhibitions grouped under the same title: Silk Prints manufactured by the Onondaga Silk Company along with the American paintings on which they were based and an exhibition showcasing projects from various schools done by students of all ages. 1948 Studio visit with Alexander Kostellow, chair of Industrial Design Department at Pratt Institute, who then writes an essay on Peri’s work for her solo exhibition at the Philadelphia Art Alliance. 1948-49 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Gallery E, Philadelphia Art Alliance, Philadelphia, PA. 1949 Saved Thomas Mann’s article on Goethe. 1949 An Exhibition for Modern Living, The Detroit Institute of Arts, Detroit, MI; exhibition catalogue illustrated by Saul Steinberg. Peri’s address listed in Index of Exhibitors under “Textiles”; Eve Peri, 61 Park Avenue, New York 16, New York. 1949 Attended Miro show at the Pierre Matisse Gallery. Quoted Matisse “The purer the colors, the stronger they act on the deepest feelings.” 1950 Eve Peri: Fabric Forms, Hacker Gallery, New York, NY; reviewed in Art Digest, May 1950 by Doris Brian. Exhibited abstract, unframed wall hangings and such decorative objects as couch cushions. Second review, Art News, May 1950, p. 50, initialed A.R.; notes “Genesis” and price range of $200-$450. Third review, The New York Times, April 18, 1950; highlights “Red Space” 1951 American Institute of Decorators, 1951 Citation of Merit; given for abstract machine embroidery and appliqué on fabric; article by Betty Pepis, “Trial by Jury,” The New York Times Magazine, March 23, 1952. All products juried were offered for consumer sale no later than January 1, 1951. Peri was among 12 winners chosen from “several hundred entries.” Article describes jury process and illustrates winning designs. Peri won a citation for “novelties.” “There were six of these [citations], and they were commended by the judges as much for their originality of concept as for their excellence of design.” 1952 Arundell Clarke, New York, NY carries work by Peri including appliquéd fabric panels ranging in price from $35-$60 a yard; highlighted in the New Yorker, May 10, 1952. 1952 Alter Ego: Masks: Their Use and Art, The Cooper Union, New York, NY; review, “200 Changes of Face,” from unknown magazine. Exhibition included historical masks including examples from the Caroline Islands, South America, Melanesia, Africa, and Alaska. Modern masks included those by Margaret Severn (a Follies dancer), Julio de Diego, James Light (designs for The Great God Brown). Eve Peri is mentioned as follows: “We can only admire the indomitable creative spirit which made Eve Peri concoct the gaily-woven face across the way when confined for a week to a Lisbon hotel with a fierce siege of the hives. [Mask to Hide the Blotches of Hives]. 1952 Hotel el Panama, Panama; two articles from Panama (one in Spanish, one in English). Two week exhibition curated by Orlean Stone, interior decorator and wife of hotel architect Edward D. Stone. The English article from The Panama American – An Independent Daily Newspaper, no date, calls attention to Peri’s “fabric forms”. O. Stone is cited as being “one of the first interior consultants to visit the Isthmus.” 1952 Patricia Long, “Germantown Artist Designs Sculptured Fabrics,” Germantown Courier, Thursday, October 2, 1952, vol. 16, no. 43, pp. 15 and 22; Peri cited as living at 161 West Penn Street. Mentions a mask [A Mask to Hide the Blotches of Hives] that “received favorable mention the Cooper Union Gallery in New York” and that “later, two of four fabrics she designed for interior decoration won prizes at the American Institute of Decorators Show…New York.” Goes on to say that those ‘fabrics were later exhibited at the Good Design Show in Chicago.” Dealers listed: Arundell Clark, New York and Stanley Wollner, Philadelphia. 1952 Saved an article by Elizabeth Bowen. 1953 Saved article on Sean O’Casey. 1953 Women in Art, Contemporary Arts Museum, 302 Dallas Avenue, Houston, Texas; Invitation to members reception and preview of the exhibition illustrates two hand knitting together the following text: “A survey of women’s work, from the United States and abroad, in bookbinding, ceramics, china, cloth, pictures, enamels, encaustics, glass, intarsias, jewelry, lithographs, needlework, painting, plastics, photography, textiles, wallpaper and weaving. The exhibition includes custom made items and designs intended for mass production. May 7th through May 27th.” 1953 Second passport issued. 1956 Watson and Boaler, Chicago, IL; group exhibition with Karl Mann...
Category

1930s Art Deco Eve Peri Art

Materials

Raw Linen, Yarn

Eve Peri art for sale on 1stDibs.

Find a wide variety of authentic Eve Peri art available for sale on 1stDibs. You can also browse by medium to find art by Eve Peri in paint, board, illustration board and more. Much of the original work by this artist or collective was created during the 20th century and is mostly associated with the abstract style. Not every interior allows for large Eve Peri art, so small editions measuring 18 inches across are available. Customers who are interested in this artist might also find the work of Michael William Eggleston, David Stephens, and Kristin Cohen. Eve Peri art prices can differ depending upon medium, time period and other attributes. On 1stDibs, the price for these items starts at $750 and tops out at $975, while the average work can sell for $863.

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