James Bishop Paintings on Paper
Park Avenue Armory, New York
February 28–March 4, 2018
press release
James Bishop Paintings on Paper
Lawrence Markey at the ADAA Art Show
Park Avenue Armory, New York
February 28–March 4, 2018
Lawrence Markey is pleased to present a group of paintings on paper by James Bishop at the 2018 ADAA Art Show. These works, oils on paper selected by the artist to be shown together, range in date from 1963-64 to 2017. Lawrence Markey has exhibited James Bishop’s work at the gallery, first in New York and later in San Antonio,
since 1997.
James Bishop was born in Neosho, Missouri in 1927. His academic training took him from Syracuse University to
Washington University in St. Louis, then to Black Mountain College and Columbia University, New York. In 1957
Bishop decamped to Europe, traveling and absorbing art in Paris and in Italy before settling permanently in Blévy,
France in 1958. Bishop has cited influence from European masters including Matisse, Cézanne and Morandi, as
well as painters of the Italian Renaissance (Lorenzo Lotto is a particular favorite).
Bishop is renowned for his larger-square format, atmospheric, color saturated, and vaguely structural-oils on
canvas. However, Bishop’s practice (now in its sixth decade) has always maintained a symbiosis with works on
paper. By the late 1980’s Bishop began to set his focus entirely on small scale, quixotic, explorations on paper.
“I went on making little works on paper but it was simply because I was more interested in what I could do with
this size, writing with the hand rather than with the arm. I think mostly it was that I could make something that
seemed to me much more personal, subjective, and possibly original, and that just interested me more....The small
ones often surprised me; mostly they are more complex.”
(“ In Conversation with Dieter Schwarz”, James Bishop: Paintings and
Works on Paper, 1993)
References to architecture, amorphous geometric structures, roman numerals and the natural world, distinguish
James Bishop’s oeuvre. Within a restricted format - paper works rarely exceed 8 x 8 inches, with some as small
as 4 x 3 inches - color, light and line achieve a startling presence; an evocative paradox of material restraint and
spacial monumentality. Bishop’s work invites the viewer to slow down and to view closely.
In an interview with Barbara Rose, Bishop said, “I hope it’s not very antisocial, but I don’t really feel that I should
be trying to make things as easy as possible. I like to make it a little difficult.”
(The Brooklyn Rail: In Conversation,
10.3.2014)
To request more information or images, please contact (210) 228-9966 or info@lawrencemarkey.com.