Pamela Helena Wilson

(Redirected from Pamela Wilson-Ryckman)

Pamela Helena Wilson (formerly Pamela Wilson-Ryckman, born 1954) is an American artist. She is best known for diffuse watercolor drawings and paintings derived from photographs, largely of news events, architectural forms and landscapes.[1][2][3] Her journalistic sources frequently depict scenes of natural and human-made calamity and the conflict, devastation and muted reactions that follow, often involving teeming crowds and demonstrations (e.g., Old Man River, 2007).[4][5][6] Wilson's process and active editing confound and obscure these events, translating the images into suggestive, new visual experiences with heightened urgency, universality and an open-endedness that plays against expectations.[7][8][9] In 2013, critic Michelle Grabner wrote, "The luminosity of watercolor on white paper and the alluring atmospheric effects [Wilson] confidently achieves in this medium creates images that are neither photographic or illustrational but seductively abstract and representational … [She] manages information and re-presents it as a complex and political visual engagement with imagery, authorship, interpretation and authority at its fore."[10]

Pamela Helena Wilson
Born1954
New York, New York, United States
EducationSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago, University of California, Berkeley
Known forWatercolor, painting, drawing
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship
WebsitePamela Helena Wilson
Pamela Helena Wilson, Old Man River, watercolor on paper, 28" x 60", 2007.

Wilson has exhibited at the de Young Museum, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA) and Nordic Watercolour Museum (Sweden), among other venues.[11][12] Her work belongs to the permanent collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) and BAMPFA, and has been commissioned by the San Francisco Arts Commission.[13][14][15] In 2009, she was awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship.[16]

Biography and career edit

Wilson was born in New York, New York in 1954.[13] She earned a B.A. in fine arts from the University of California, Berkeley in 1976 and worked for a period as a scenic artist painting sets for the Santa Fe Opera and the Julliard School.[5] In 1995, she earned an M.A. in art history, theory and criticism from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. During the 1990s, Wilson painted in an abstract mode indebted to Asian art and landscape, before turning to the representational work in 1999.[17][5][3] From 1999 to 2021, she was based in San Francisco.[18] She currently lives and works in New York City.

Wilson has had solo exhibitions at Gallery Paule Anglim, now Anglim Trimble Gallery (2004–20) in San Francisco, Monique Meloche Gallery (2002, 2005) in Chicago, Dominican University (2016) and rosyendpost (2021) in Greenport, NY, among other venues.[2][1][3][9][19]

She has shown in surveys including "The Unhomely: Phantom Scenes in Global Society" (International Biennial of Contemporary Art Seville, 2007); "Pacific Light: California Watercolor Refracted, 1907-2007" (Nordic Watercolour Museum, 2007); and "To Bend the Ear of the Outer World" (Gagosian, London, 2023).[20][21][22] She has curated shows at the Oakland Art Gallery (2005) and New Langton Arts (2007).[23][24]

Work and reception edit

Critics contend that Wilson's work derives power from the conceptual interplay between the (traditionally regarded) fragility of her medium—primarily watercolor—and the charged nature of her subject matter.[7][6][5] Her approach connects delicate technical mastery—including striking uses of light and dark, broad washes of color, and white space—to harsh realities of violence and shifting order.[5][8][2] It also links the ephemerality of newspaper images to that of watercolor paint.[9] Her images have been described as "deft but unfussy"[23] works of "beauty emerg[ing] out of chaos."[2][4]

Because of the degree of abstraction and disconnection between subject and technique, reviewers suggest that Wilson's work is more engaged with themes of memory, recall and the reception of journalistic images than storytelling or memorializing specific events.[7][3][9] Her source materials are chosen less for their dramatic statements than as images to be probed or understood in deeper experiential terms of light, movement, interrelationship of shapes, and hidden or collapsing forms.[5][9][7] Artforum critic Glen Helfand wrote, "Wavering between reality and metaphor, the sober and the dreamlike, Wilson's images recall the ambivalence of Luc Tuymans's impassive urban views and Gerhard Richter's Baader-Meinhof paintings … [they] evoke the pomp of history painting while skirting that genre's didacticism via astute stylistic choices and a judicious ambiguity."[2]

In addition to Tuymans, critics have also related Wilson to figurative artists Marlene Dumas and Peter Doig, abstract painters Joan Mitchell and Richard Diebenkorn, and to the pictorial concerns of Post-Impressionism and Social Realism.[5][1][10]

Work 1999–2012 edit

After turning to representation, Wilson produced oil paintings and watercolors depicting her surroundings (interiors, views from windows) as well as found news photos that she first presented in a solo exhibition at Monique Meloche Gallery (2002).[3] She continued to explore both these themes and mediums in her mid-decade shows—at Meloche (2005) and Gallery Paule Anglim (2004, 2008)—offering re-articulations of images of war devastation, floods, accidents or masses of people gathered for political events, protest marches or riots.[2][7][25]

These works took as much interest in pattern and structure as in the specific events, rendering them universal in nature; for example, the collapsed high-rise lattice of the watercolor, Building (2004), evoked any number of war or terrorism disasters, while the aerial view in the oil painting Vox Populi (2004) rendered the throng attending George W. Bush's 2000 inauguration ceremony as an undifferentiated mass.[2]

Later work edit

 
Pamela Helena Wilson, Marl Hill Baptist, oil and acrylic on linen, 24" x 30", 2019.

In her later practice, Wilson expanded to oil and acrylic paintings on canvas. Despite titles of exhibitions and individual works (Cairo, Arab Spring) that referenced specific events and places, this work moved toward a greater degree of abstraction.[1][26] In a review of her show "GPS" (2013), San Francisco Chronicle critic Kenneth Baker suggested the abstraction might signal a crisis of faith in images: "In the way they assert their own materiality, most of the paintings here hint that neither depiction nor process can truthfully evoke witness to events, or even response to distant reports of them. These works do not so much deny as lament the impossibility of abstract 'history painting'—contemporary painting's incapacity to evolve visual idioms suited to its historical moment."[1]

Wilson's exhibitions, "Berlin Stories" (2015), "Twilight" (2016) and "Second Nature" (2020), focused on architectural structures referenced from archival photos, exploring themes of memory and the weight of history.[27][26] The former show depicted the 19th-century neo-classical buildings of the architect Karl Friedrich Schinkel in floating, strongly colored abstract shapes. Based on 1970s photographs of Soviet-controlled East Germany, "Twilight" rendered the architecture of the DDR in Chinese-landscape influenced brushstrokes; largely divorced from backgrounds and stripped of historical context, they suggest a tension between abstract form and historical consciousness.[27] The oil and acrylic paintings in "Second Nature" depicted open-ended, hazy apparitions of rural Southern churches (largely clapboard siding, rooftops, steeples) in fields of shifting space and overlapping color areas that suggested states of order, disuse or vegetative overgrowth (e.g., Marl Hill Baptist, 2019).[26]

Recognition edit

Wilson has been awarded a John S. Guggenheim Fellowship (2009), an Eisner Foundation grant (1976), and artist residencies at the Institute of Contemporary Art San José, Ossabaw Island Foundation and Yaddo.[18][28]

Her work belongs to the public collections of the Berkeley Art Museum, The MacArthur Foundation, San Francisco Civic Art Collection, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and University of San Francisco, Mission Bay.[14][29][30] Her watercolor series "Taking In" (2009–10), which reinterpreted archival images of people looking, reflecting and finding respite within the local urban landscape, was featured in the San Francisco Arts Commission's Art on Market Street program.[15][31]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Baker, Kenneth. "Wilson-Ryckman and Xie," San Francisco Chronicle, September 6, 2013, p. E-2. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Helfand, Glen. "Pamela Wilson," Artforum, March 2005. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  3. ^ a b c d e Artner, Alan. "Pamela Wilson," Chicago Tribune, February 22, 2002, Sect. 7, p. 22.
  4. ^ a b Torr, Jolene. "Devastations and Behaviors," ArtSlant, April 18, 2008.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g Fellah, Nadiah. "In the Studio: Pamela Wilson-Ryckman," New American Painters, 2010. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  6. ^ a b Baker, Kenneth. "Calamities transformed at Mills," San Francisco Chronicle, September 9, 2006. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  7. ^ a b c d e Grabner, Michelle. "Pamela Wilson," Art US, March/April 2006, p. 20.
  8. ^ a b ArtistDaily. "Pamela Wilson-Ryckman," "Watercolor: 25 Artists to Watch”, Fall 2011, p. 72.
  9. ^ a b c d e Larson, Brandon. "Comments on Pamela Wilson: Hard to Remember, Easy to Forget at Monique Meloche, BAT—Blatantly Accumulating Targets: Art Criticism and Discussion, April 2006, p. 23.
  10. ^ a b Grabner, Michelle. "Detachable, Connectable," Pamela Wilson-Ryckman: Home and Away, 2013.
  11. ^ Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive. "Recent Acquisitions from the BAMPFA Collection," 2022. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  12. ^ New American Painters. "Pamela Wilson-Ryckman," No. 91, Pacific Coast, Vol. 16, Issue 1, December 2010, p. 148–51.
  13. ^ a b San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Pamela Wilson-Ryckman, Artists. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  14. ^ a b Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive. "No. 4 (First Baptist Church of Goshen), Pamela Wilson-Ryckman," Collection. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  15. ^ a b San Francisco Arts Commission. '"Taking In: Dolores Park, Pamela Wilson-Ryckman," Objects.
  16. ^ Artforum. "Guggenheim Fellows Announced," News, April 10, 2009. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  17. ^ Artner, Alan. "The Content of Abstraction, Illinois Art Gallery," Chicago Tribune, May 5, 1995. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  18. ^ a b John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation. Pamela Wilson-Ryckman, Fellows. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  19. ^ Feldman, Melissa. "The Ultimate Art Lovers' Guide to the North Fork of Long Island," Galerie, September 20, 2021. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  20. ^ Demos, T.J. "The 2nd International Biennial of Contemporary Art of Seville," Artforum, March 2007. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  21. ^ Harper's Magazine. "Melee 1," February 2006, p. 20.
  22. ^ Mousse Magazine. "'To Bend the Ear of the Outer World: Conversations on Contemporary Abstract Painting' at Gagosian, London," June 27, 2023. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  23. ^ a b Baker, Kenneth. "Sometimes we wish for more, sometimes less," San Francisco Chronicle, August 20, 2005, p. E-10.
  24. ^ Baker, Kenneth. "'Good, Bad and Ugly' at Langton," San Francisco Chronicle, February 17, 2007. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  25. ^ Goodbody, Bridget L. "Air," Time Out New York, July 6–12, 2006.
  26. ^ a b c Minnesota Street Project. "Pamela Wilson-Ryckman: Second Nature," Exhibitions. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  27. ^ a b Seikaly, Roula. "Recollected: Photography and the Archive," Humble Arts Foundation, November 2011. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  28. ^ Yaddo. Our Artists. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  29. ^ Burns Advisory. Institutional Collections, The MacArthur Foundation. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  30. ^ San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Pamela Wilson-Ryckman, Cairo, 2012, Artwork. Retrieved May 10, 2024.
  31. ^ East Bay Times. "Preview calendar," September 30, 2009. Retrieved May 10, 2024.

External links edit