Marylyn Dintenfass Art
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Vibrant, Abstract, Geometric Painting 'Circuitious' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Circuitious' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2015. Oil on canvas, 24 x 24 in. This abstract painting focuses on Dintenfass' signature 'Oculus' motif, fe...
Category
2010s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Vibrant, Abstract, Geometric Painting 'Eversion' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Eversion' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2015. Oil on canvas, 24 x 24 in. This abstract painting focuses on Dintenfass' signature 'Oculus' motif, featu...
Category
2010s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Vibrant, Abstract, Gestural Painting 'Daisy Chain' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Daisy Chain' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2025. Oil on wood panel, 48 x 48 in. This abstract painting features four separate quadrants, each featurin...
Category
2010s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Colorful Abstract Expressionist Painting by Marylyn Dintenfass 'Heart Throb'
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
'Heart Throb' by American artist Marylyn Dintenfass. 35 x 47 in. is a stunning abstract expressionist painting that features a vibrant color palette and dynamic, gestural brushstroke...
Category
2010s Abstract Expressionist Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Paper, Oil
Abstract Red Persimmon Oil Painting on Panel Marylyn Dintenfass Modernist
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in Surfside, FL
Provenance: Babcock Galleries (bears their label verso. signed verso with artists monogram signature.
Marylyn Dintenfass (born 1943) is an American painter, printmaker, and sculptor. She is primarily known for her oil paintings, which use a dynamic color palette and lexicon of gestural imagery to explore dualities in the human experience and everyday sensual pleasures.
Marylyn Dintenfass was born in 1943 in Brooklyn, New York and spent most of her early years in Brooklyn and then Long Island. She attended Queens College, and graduated in 1965 with a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts. During this time, the artist worked with Abstract Expressionist painter John Ferren and muralist Barse Miller. Marilyn Dintenfass explored new media and developed her own reaction to abstract expressionism with color, line, and gesture. Dintenfass acquired an appreciation for a broad range of materials that led to major sculpture installations composed of ceramic materials, steel, lead, wood, wax and a variety of pigments and epoxies.
Following a tour of museums in Amsterdam, Paris and Rome, the artist made her way to Jerusalem in 1966. During this journey, the artist worked with painter Ruth Bamberger, studied etching and mingled with the artists and intellectuals of the city. The result was Dintenfass's first architectural commission, to design the “Pop Op Disco,” Jerusalem's first disco. This commission allowed her to work with an array of materials to employ shapes, surfaces, textures, colors, and lights, all of which coalesced in her consciousness that would become important components of her mature personal visual vocabulary. Dintenfass also married and started her family during these years.
Art critic Meredith Mendelsohn writes, “Dintenfass uses luscious colors, repetitive forms, and a gestural intensity that combines Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art.”
Dintenfass often works with oil paint on wooden panels fragmented into parts of a grid. "After completing a painting," writes curator and critic Lilly Wei in a study of Dintenfass' work, "Dintenfass literally takes it apart, treating each panel as a discrete entity, exchanging panels between works in an aesthetic mix and match as she searches for interactions and relationships of color and form that satisfy her sense of visual excitement, sparked by the frisson of the dissonant." In an interview with critic Irving Sandler, Dintenfass speaks of the grid as a necessary, formal restraint for the passion of the gestural marks it contains. Joyce Robinson illuminates; “Dintenfass is at heart, though, a painter, and the grid, with its reference to and notion of modular parts, has remained central to her artistic enterprise, functioning as a kind of Apollonian matrix holding in check the exuberant, vividly colored abstractions of this essentially Dionysian artist.”
Lilly Wei adds, "Ultimately, however, Dintenfass is more sensualist than theorist, and her paintings owe much of their allure to their materiality and the dazzle of color. Her array of ripe, radiant, saturated hues—a palette of gorgeous diversity—can be silkily smooth and nuanced; boldly exuberant; or edgily, feverishly discordant."
The artist's abstract imagery usually appears in her work as various forms of stripes or circles arranged across translucent layers of alternating matte and high gloss textures. In a conversation with gallery owner, John Driscoll, Dintenfass likens these symbols to language that predates the written word, saying her "work relates to communication through the visceral channel." Rooted in autobiography, the artist's paintings also examine the contrast between what she calls the “micro” and the “macro.” At times the shapes simultaneously resemble cells under a microscope and visions of the cosmos. Dintenfass' themes explore the dualities of everyday pleasures; depending on the focus of a series, her symbols might conjure characters, candies, car wheels, or paint itself.
Although known for her paintings, Dintenfass was first recognized for her sculptural installations. Her innovative use of mixed media (ceramics, epoxies, wax, pigments, steel, lead, wood, etc.) transformed understanding of what a “ceramic” work of art could be and firmly fixed her position and influence among a generation of mixed media artists expanding the traditional definitions and boundaries of object and materials to create modern art. The results came as architectural reliefs and installation sculpture unique to her organic but structural personal style. Similar to her paintings, Dintenfass developed a modular language of symbols, amalgams of line and curve, which she would combine to create detailed pictographic languages all her own, what she has called “organic alphabets.” As Ted Castle relates, “Ideas are furtive elements, stolen from the matrix, so as to be reformed by human genius into something unforeseen—a poem, a painting, a game of dominoes, a television set, a brick, a tile, a cup. Marylyn Dintenfass is a master of the transformation of ideas into palpable form.”
Dintenfass has also been commissioned to create many large-scale installations, including works for the State of Connecticut Superior Courthouse; the Port Authority of NY 42nd Street Bus Terminal; IBM in Atlanta, Charlotte, and San Jose; The Baltimore Federal...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Panel
"AKEE" Oil Painting, Marylyn Dintenfass Modernist Abstract Expressionist Pop Art
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in Surfside, FL
Provenance: Babcock Galleries (bears their label verso.) signed verso with artists monogram signature.
Marylyn Dintenfass (born 1943) is an American painter, printmaker, and sculptor. She is primarily known for her oil paintings, which use a dynamic color palette and lexicon of gestural imagery to explore dualities in the human experience and everyday sensual pleasures.
Marylyn Dintenfass was born in 1943 in Brooklyn, New York and spent most of her early years in Brooklyn and then Long Island. She attended Queens College, and graduated in 1965 with a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts. During this time, the artist worked with Abstract Expressionist painter John Ferren and muralist Barse Miller. Marilyn Dintenfass explored new media and developed her own reaction to abstract expressionism with color, line, and gesture. Dintenfass acquired an appreciation for a broad range of materials that led to major sculpture installations composed of ceramic materials, steel, lead, wood, wax and a variety of pigments and epoxies.
Following a tour of museums in Amsterdam, Paris and Rome, the artist made her way to Jerusalem in 1966. During this journey, the artist worked with painter Ruth Bamberger, studied etching and mingled with the artists and intellectuals of the city. The result was Dintenfass's first architectural commission, to design the “Pop Op Disco,” Jerusalem's first disco. This commission allowed her to work with an array of materials to employ shapes, surfaces, textures, colors, and lights, all of which coalesced in her consciousness that would become important components of her mature personal visual vocabulary. Dintenfass also married and started her family during these years.
Art critic Meredith Mendelsohn writes, “Dintenfass uses luscious colors, repetitive forms, and a gestural intensity that combines Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art.”
Dintenfass often works with oil paint on wooden panels fragmented into parts of a grid. "After completing a painting," writes curator and critic Lilly Wei in a study of Dintenfass' work, "Dintenfass literally takes it apart, treating each panel as a discrete entity, exchanging panels between works in an aesthetic mix and match as she searches for interactions and relationships of color and form that satisfy her sense of visual excitement, sparked by the frisson of the dissonant." In an interview with critic Irving Sandler, Dintenfass speaks of the grid as a necessary, formal restraint for the passion of the gestural marks it contains. Joyce Robinson illuminates; “Dintenfass is at heart, though, a painter, and the grid, with its reference to and notion of modular parts, has remained central to her artistic enterprise, functioning as a kind of Apollonian matrix holding in check the exuberant, vividly colored abstractions of this essentially Dionysian artist.”
Lilly Wei adds, "Ultimately, however, Dintenfass is more sensualist than theorist, and her paintings owe much of their allure to their materiality and the dazzle of color. Her array of ripe, radiant, saturated hues—a palette of gorgeous diversity—can be silkily smooth and nuanced; boldly exuberant; or edgily, feverishly discordant."
The artist's abstract imagery usually appears in her work as various forms of stripes or circles arranged across translucent layers of alternating matte and high gloss textures. In a conversation with gallery owner, John Driscoll, Dintenfass likens these symbols to language that predates the written word, saying her "work relates to communication through the visceral channel." Rooted in autobiography, the artist's paintings also examine the contrast between what she calls the “micro” and the “macro.” At times the shapes simultaneously resemble cells under a microscope and visions of the cosmos. Dintenfass' themes explore the dualities of everyday pleasures; depending on the focus of a series, her symbols might conjure characters, candies, car wheels, or paint itself.
Although known for her paintings, Dintenfass was first recognized for her sculptural installations. Her innovative use of mixed media (ceramics, epoxies, wax, pigments, steel, lead, wood, etc.) transformed understanding of what a “ceramic” work of art could be and firmly fixed her position and influence among a generation of mixed media artists expanding the traditional definitions and boundaries of object and materials to create modern art. The results came as architectural reliefs and installation sculpture unique to her organic but structural personal style. Similar to her paintings, Dintenfass developed a modular language of symbols, amalgams of line and curve, which she would combine to create detailed pictographic languages all her own, what she has called “organic alphabets.” As Ted Castle relates, “Ideas are furtive elements, stolen from the matrix, so as to be reformed by human genius into something unforeseen—a poem, a painting, a game of dominoes, a television set, a brick, a tile, a cup. Marylyn Dintenfass is a master of the transformation of ideas into palpable form.”
Dintenfass has also been commissioned to create many large-scale installations, including works for the State of Connecticut Superior Courthouse; the Port Authority of NY 42nd Street Bus Terminal; IBM in Atlanta, Charlotte, and San Jose; The Baltimore Federal...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Panel
Vibrant, Abstract, Geometric Painting 'Entrance' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Entrance' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2015. Oil on canvas, 24 x 24 in. This abstract painting focuses on Dintenfass' signature 'Oculus' motif, featu...
Category
2010s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Canvas, Oil
Vibrant, Abstract, Gestural Painting 'Nougat' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Nougat' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2009. Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in. This abstract painting features a vibrant palette of red and orange. Through a d...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Panel
Vibrant, Abstract Painting 'Payday' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Payday by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2009. Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in. This abstract painting features a vibrant palette of blue, green, and brown. Thro...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Vibrant, Abstract, Floral Painting 'Marmalade' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Marmalade' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2006. Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in. This abstract painting features a vibrant palette of orange, yellow, and pink...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Vibrant, Abstract, Floral Painting 'Poof' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Poof' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2004. Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in. This abstract painting features a palette of pink and blue. Through a distinctive ...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Vibrant, Abstract, Gestural Painting 'Cadbury' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Cadbury' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2009. Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in. This abstract painting features a vibrant palette of varied hues of red and ora...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Vibrant, Abstract, Gestural Painting 'Toffee' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Toffee' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2008. Oil on panel, 12 x 12 in. This abstract painting features a vibrant palette of varied hues of orange. Thro...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Wood Panel
Vibrant, Abstract, Geometric Painting 'Well' by Marylyn Dintenfass
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in White Plains, NY
Available at Madelyn Jordon Fine Art. 'Well' by Marylyn Dintenfass, 2015. Oil on canvas, 24 x 24 in. This abstract painting focuses on Dintenfass' signature 'Oculus' motif, featuring...
Category
2010s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Canvas, Oil
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This modern abstract expressionist oil painting was painted by Woodstock, NY based artist, Jenny Nelson, in 2016. The colorful abstract is composed of calming tones of teal and dark blue. The contrasting patches of pinks and green beautifully pop against the subtle pale pink background. Color is applied in light layers which is noticeable in the faint yet visible under tones of the painting. The oil painting includes an 20 x 16 inch 8 ply matte and is signed on the lower right hand corner.
About the Artist:
It is with her commitment to a lifelong, organic process that Jenny Nelson has achieved what so many artists and creatives work for; a language and a technique that is very much her own. She has wooed audiences here and abroad with consistently exquisite and balanced abstract paintings in neutral palettes of blues and grays that give way to pops of pink and orange. But to pin her as solely an abstractionist would be limiting her skill and versatility as a painter. Classically trained at Bard College, Nelson’s thorough knowledge of composition and color relationships as experienced through drawing from life are the tools that prepared her to work in abstraction and develop her technique. Nelson begins all her paintings the same way; she mixes an extensive palette of colors, preps the square canvas, and goes to town obliterating the surface with lots of color and wild gestures using oil sticks and brushes. After sitting with the discomfort and rawness that remains, Nelson turns the canvas around and around until a shape or color comes to the foreground. The next step is reductive as she blocks out bits of chaos with a solid color applied with a palette knife, oil sticks and brushes. Tension is built through the push and pull of paint as it is layered over colors and unruly forms. Nelson studies the painting at all stages of this process, waiting for it to communicate the next step until harmony and balance is achieved. Each work, with its own identity demanding attention and complete surrender to the process, may seem daunting at the onset. But Nelson is comforted by the perspective that painting is infinite and each new canvas is just one of many, therefore easing her expectations. Some pieces in this new body of work differ from previous paintings in that the abstractions are once again rooted in life. Inspired by the photographs of artist Joseph Podlesnik, Nelson uses his architectural and observational compositions as the framework for her new work. While the origins of the photographs’ subjects are not recognizable in the finished painting, she channels the energy discovered in his real-life findings to her canvas for a result that is entirely abstract. Invigorated by this approach, Nelson bravely moves forward, prepared to shift genres if that is where her journey takes her. A graduate of Bard College, Jenny Nelson also studied at the Lacoste School of the Arts in France and Maine College of Art. She completed a Residency at Byrdcliffe Art Colony from 2004 – 2008 and has exhibited regionally and nationally for many years. Nelson currently teaches workshops and an ongoing weekly class at the Woodstock School of Art.
More about the artist:
Jenny Nelson attended Maine College of Art in Portland Maine, and is a graduate of Bard College, where she received a scholarship to the Lacoste School of the Arts in France. She has been living in Woodstock, New York for nearly two decades, including a Residency at the Byrdcliffe Art Colony from November 2004-08. Jenny has been exhibiting for many years nationally and regionally including, Tria Gallery, Manhattan, NY; Hidell Brooks Gallery in Charlotte, North Carolina; Carrie Haddad, Hudson, NY.
SELECTED EXHIBITIONS:
Solo Shows:
2019 Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson, NY
2019 Hidell Brooks Gallery, Charlotte NC
2018 Light Waves, Hidell Brooks Gallery, Charlotte NC
2017 New Works, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
2016 Sailing in Place, Hidell Brooks Gallery, Charlotte NC
2013 Traveling Light, Tria Gallery, Manhattan NY
2012 New Work, Smink Modern, Dallas TX
2012 New Work, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
2011 Awakenings (Duo with Keun Young Park) Tria Gallery, Manhattan NY
2010 New Paintings, Chace-Randall Gallery, Andes NY
2008 Autumn Elegance, Asher Neiman Gallery, Red Bank NJ
2008 The Light Between, Chace-Randall Gallery, Andes NY
2007 New Work, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
2006 Of Line and Light, Chace-Randall Gallery, Andes NY
2006 Abstractions, Gallery 100, Saratoga NY
2005 Spring Collection, Coffey Gallery, Kingston NY
2005 New Work, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
2004 Summer, Omega Institute, Rhinebeck NY
2004 New Work, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
2003 Paintings from Shady, Coffey Gallery, Kingston NY
2001 Fisher Studio Art Gallery, Annandale-on-Hudson
Group Exhibitions:
2018 20th Anniversary Show, Hidell Brooks Gallery, Charlotte, NC
2017 Due East: Woodstock Artists in Nantucket, Nantucket Arts Center, Nantucket, MA
2017 Composition: The Abstract Landscape, Kleinert/James Gallery, Woodstock NY
2014 Women in Abstract, Hidell Brooks Gallery, Charlotte NC
2013 Hidell Brooks Anniversary Show, Hidell Brooks Gallery, Charlotte, NC
2013 AD Boston Art Fair, Gold Gallery, Boston
2012 Contemporary Painters, Carrie Haddad Gallery Hudson, NY
2012 Featured Artist, Dragonfly Gallery, Martha's Vineyard, MA
2012 Tria Gallery Summer Exhibition, Manhattan, NY
2012 AAF NYC, Tria Gallery, Manhattan, NY
2011 Featured Artist, Dragonfly Gallery, Martha's Vineyard, MA
2011 AAF NYC, Tria Gallery, Manhattan, NY
2011 Figures and Abstractions, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
2010 Art Hamptons, Tria Gallery, Manhattan NY
2010 Featured Artist, Dragonfly Gallery, Martha's Vineyard MA
2009 LA Art Fair, Bryant Street Gallery, Palo Alto CA
2009 Curators Choice, Chace-Randall Gallery, Andes NY
2009 Instructors Exhibition, Woodstock School of Art, Woodstock NY
2009 Group Exhibition, Bryant Street Gallery, Palo Alto CA
2009 Small Works, Anne Irwin Fine Art, Atlanta GA
2009 Winter White, Tria Gallery, Manhattan NY
2009 Contrasts, Anne Irwin Fine Art, Atlanta GA
2009 AAF NYC Tria Gallery, Manhattan NY
2008 Summer Cocktail, Tria Gallery, Manhattan NY
2008 5"x7" Show, Kleinart-James Gallery, Woodstock NY
2007 Faculty Plus One, Columbia Greene Community College, Hudson NY
2007 Art Basel Miami, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
2007 One New Work, Chace-Randall Gallery, Andes NY
2007 5"x7" Show, Kleinart-James Gallery, Woodstock, NY
2006 Beach, Gallery Yellow, Cross River NY
2006 Flow, Kleinart/James Gallery, Woodstock, NY
2006 Group Exhibition, James Cox Gallery, Woodstock NY
2006 Collectors Choice, Kleinert/James Gallery, Woodstock NY
2005 Group Exhibition, Chace Randall Gallery, Andes NY
2005 Passionate About Art, Kleinert/James Gallery, Woodstock NY
2005 New Talent, Alpha Gallery, Boston MA
2004 Six Women Painters, Albert Shahinian Fine Art, Poughkeepsie NY
2004 New York Underground Art Fair, Pool Art Addict, Four Points Hotel NY
2003 Senate House Show, Kingston NY
2002 Group Exhibition, Carrie Haddad Gallery, Hudson NY
Juried Exhibitions:
2004 Woodstock Artists Association, Woodstock NY
2002 Hudson Valley Artists 2002, Samuel Dorsky Museum, New Paltz NY
Selected Collections:
Warren Bierwirth, Paris, France
Cecilia Greene, New York NY
Helen Chapman, New York NY
Michael & Sheila Faharty, New York NY
Christopher Dlutowski, New York NY
Jim & Dianne Footlicke, New York NY
Laurent Gaudry, New York NY
Nancy Seigal, Boca Raton FL
Holli Gersh, Boca Raton FL
Kenneth & Margaret Uhle, Ridgefield CT
Dr. Lee Sider, Mt. Tremper NY
Friedrike Merck, Woodstock NY
Weston & Julia Blelock, Woodstock NY
Miller Howard Investments, Woodstock NY
Kingston Hospital, Kingston NY
Media:
Jenny Nelson, Accidental Storyteller, Carrie Haddad Gallery, 2017
Jenny Nelson's chaos, Hudson Valley One, 2017
A Conversation with Artist Jenny Nelson,, Blog Talk Radio...
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Previously Available Items
Abstract Red Persimmon Oil Painting on Panel Marylyn Dintenfass Modernist
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in Surfside, FL
Provenance: Babcock Galleries (bears their label verso. signed verso with artists monogram signature.
Marylyn Dintenfass (born 1943) is an American painter, printmaker, and sculptor. She is primarily known for her oil paintings, which use a dynamic color palette and lexicon of gestural imagery to explore dualities in the human experience and everyday sensual pleasures.
Marylyn Dintenfass was born in 1943 in Brooklyn, New York and spent most of her early years in Brooklyn and then Long Island. She attended Queens College, and graduated in 1965 with a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts. During this time, the artist worked with Abstract Expressionist painter John Ferren and muralist Barse Miller. Marilyn Dintenfass explored new media and developed her own reaction to abstract expressionism with color, line, and gesture. Dintenfass acquired an appreciation for a broad range of materials that led to major sculpture installations composed of ceramic materials, steel, lead, wood, wax and a variety of pigments and epoxies.
Following a tour of museums in Amsterdam, Paris and Rome, the artist made her way to Jerusalem in 1966. During this journey, the artist worked with painter Ruth Bamberger, studied etching and mingled with the artists and intellectuals of the city. The result was Dintenfass's first architectural commission, to design the “Pop Op Disco,” Jerusalem's first disco. This commission allowed her to work with an array of materials to employ shapes, surfaces, textures, colors, and lights, all of which coalesced in her consciousness that would become important components of her mature personal visual vocabulary. Dintenfass also married and started her family during these years.
Art critic Meredith Mendelsohn writes, “Dintenfass uses luscious colors, repetitive forms, and a gestural intensity that combines Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art.”
Dintenfass often works with oil paint on wooden panels fragmented into parts of a grid. "After completing a painting," writes curator and critic Lilly Wei in a study of Dintenfass' work, "Dintenfass literally takes it apart, treating each panel as a discrete entity, exchanging panels between works in an aesthetic mix and match as she searches for interactions and relationships of color and form that satisfy her sense of visual excitement, sparked by the frisson of the dissonant." In an interview with critic Irving Sandler, Dintenfass speaks of the grid as a necessary, formal restraint for the passion of the gestural marks it contains. Joyce Robinson illuminates; “Dintenfass is at heart, though, a painter, and the grid, with its reference to and notion of modular parts, has remained central to her artistic enterprise, functioning as a kind of Apollonian matrix holding in check the exuberant, vividly colored abstractions of this essentially Dionysian artist.”
Lilly Wei adds, "Ultimately, however, Dintenfass is more sensualist than theorist, and her paintings owe much of their allure to their materiality and the dazzle of color. Her array of ripe, radiant, saturated hues—a palette of gorgeous diversity—can be silkily smooth and nuanced; boldly exuberant; or edgily, feverishly discordant."
The artist's abstract imagery usually appears in her work as various forms of stripes or circles arranged across translucent layers of alternating matte and high gloss textures. In a conversation with gallery owner, John Driscoll, Dintenfass likens these symbols to language that predates the written word, saying her "work relates to communication through the visceral channel." Rooted in autobiography, the artist's paintings also examine the contrast between what she calls the “micro” and the “macro.” At times the shapes simultaneously resemble cells under a microscope and visions of the cosmos. Dintenfass' themes explore the dualities of everyday pleasures; depending on the focus of a series, her symbols might conjure characters, candies, car wheels, or paint itself.
Although known for her paintings, Dintenfass was first recognized for her sculptural installations. Her innovative use of mixed media (ceramics, epoxies, wax, pigments, steel, lead, wood, etc.) transformed understanding of what a “ceramic” work of art could be and firmly fixed her position and influence among a generation of mixed media artists expanding the traditional definitions and boundaries of object and materials to create modern art. The results came as architectural reliefs and installation sculpture unique to her organic but structural personal style. Similar to her paintings, Dintenfass developed a modular language of symbols, amalgams of line and curve, which she would combine to create detailed pictographic languages all her own, what she has called “organic alphabets.” As Ted Castle relates, “Ideas are furtive elements, stolen from the matrix, so as to be reformed by human genius into something unforeseen—a poem, a painting, a game of dominoes, a television set, a brick, a tile, a cup. Marylyn Dintenfass is a master of the transformation of ideas into palpable form.”
Dintenfass has also been commissioned to create many large-scale installations, including works for the State of Connecticut Superior Courthouse; the Port Authority of NY 42nd Street Bus Terminal; IBM in Atlanta, Charlotte, and San Jose; The Baltimore Federal...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Panel
"AKEE" Oil Painting, Marylyn Dintenfass Modernist Abstract Expressionist Pop Art
By Marylyn Dintenfass
Located in Surfside, FL
Provenance: Babcock Galleries (bears their label verso.) signed verso with artists monogram signature.
Marylyn Dintenfass (born 1943) is an American painter, printmaker, and sculptor. She is primarily known for her oil paintings, which use a dynamic color palette and lexicon of gestural imagery to explore dualities in the human experience and everyday sensual pleasures.
Marylyn Dintenfass was born in 1943 in Brooklyn, New York and spent most of her early years in Brooklyn and then Long Island. She attended Queens College, and graduated in 1965 with a bachelor's degree in Fine Arts. During this time, the artist worked with Abstract Expressionist painter John Ferren and muralist Barse Miller. Marilyn Dintenfass explored new media and developed her own reaction to abstract expressionism with color, line, and gesture. Dintenfass acquired an appreciation for a broad range of materials that led to major sculpture installations composed of ceramic materials, steel, lead, wood, wax and a variety of pigments and epoxies.
Following a tour of museums in Amsterdam, Paris and Rome, the artist made her way to Jerusalem in 1966. During this journey, the artist worked with painter Ruth Bamberger, studied etching and mingled with the artists and intellectuals of the city. The result was Dintenfass's first architectural commission, to design the “Pop Op Disco,” Jerusalem's first disco. This commission allowed her to work with an array of materials to employ shapes, surfaces, textures, colors, and lights, all of which coalesced in her consciousness that would become important components of her mature personal visual vocabulary. Dintenfass also married and started her family during these years.
Art critic Meredith Mendelsohn writes, “Dintenfass uses luscious colors, repetitive forms, and a gestural intensity that combines Abstract Expressionism and Pop Art.”
Dintenfass often works with oil paint on wooden panels fragmented into parts of a grid. "After completing a painting," writes curator and critic Lilly Wei in a study of Dintenfass' work, "Dintenfass literally takes it apart, treating each panel as a discrete entity, exchanging panels between works in an aesthetic mix and match as she searches for interactions and relationships of color and form that satisfy her sense of visual excitement, sparked by the frisson of the dissonant." In an interview with critic Irving Sandler, Dintenfass speaks of the grid as a necessary, formal restraint for the passion of the gestural marks it contains. Joyce Robinson illuminates; “Dintenfass is at heart, though, a painter, and the grid, with its reference to and notion of modular parts, has remained central to her artistic enterprise, functioning as a kind of Apollonian matrix holding in check the exuberant, vividly colored abstractions of this essentially Dionysian artist.”
Lilly Wei adds, "Ultimately, however, Dintenfass is more sensualist than theorist, and her paintings owe much of their allure to their materiality and the dazzle of color. Her array of ripe, radiant, saturated hues—a palette of gorgeous diversity—can be silkily smooth and nuanced; boldly exuberant; or edgily, feverishly discordant."
The artist's abstract imagery usually appears in her work as various forms of stripes or circles arranged across translucent layers of alternating matte and high gloss textures. In a conversation with gallery owner, John Driscoll, Dintenfass likens these symbols to language that predates the written word, saying her "work relates to communication through the visceral channel." Rooted in autobiography, the artist's paintings also examine the contrast between what she calls the “micro” and the “macro.” At times the shapes simultaneously resemble cells under a microscope and visions of the cosmos. Dintenfass' themes explore the dualities of everyday pleasures; depending on the focus of a series, her symbols might conjure characters, candies, car wheels, or paint itself.
Although known for her paintings, Dintenfass was first recognized for her sculptural installations. Her innovative use of mixed media (ceramics, epoxies, wax, pigments, steel, lead, wood, etc.) transformed understanding of what a “ceramic” work of art could be and firmly fixed her position and influence among a generation of mixed media artists expanding the traditional definitions and boundaries of object and materials to create modern art. The results came as architectural reliefs and installation sculpture unique to her organic but structural personal style. Similar to her paintings, Dintenfass developed a modular language of symbols, amalgams of line and curve, which she would combine to create detailed pictographic languages all her own, what she has called “organic alphabets.” As Ted Castle relates, “Ideas are furtive elements, stolen from the matrix, so as to be reformed by human genius into something unforeseen—a poem, a painting, a game of dominoes, a television set, a brick, a tile, a cup. Marylyn Dintenfass is a master of the transformation of ideas into palpable form.”
Dintenfass has also been commissioned to create many large-scale installations, including works for the State of Connecticut Superior Courthouse; the Port Authority of NY 42nd Street Bus Terminal; IBM in Atlanta, Charlotte, and San Jose; The Baltimore Federal...
Category
Early 2000s Abstract Marylyn Dintenfass Art
Materials
Oil, Panel
Marylyn Dintenfass art for sale on 1stDibs.
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