Summer ‘24
Featuring: Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, James Hennessey, Rania Matar, Jae Ko, John Ruppert, and Amelie Wang
Grimaldis Gallery
523 N. Charles St.
Through Sept. 14
As summer’s lushness is winding down, I always petition Mother Nature for just a few more weeks. Thankfully, the C. Grimaldis Gallery has extended their summer group exhibition into September, allowing us a grace period to experience this powerful combination of contemporary art gathered from across the world. This is the 47th annual summer group exhibit at the historic Baltimore gallery, with a sophisticated range of painting, photography, printmaking, and sculpture featuring Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, James Hennessey, Rania Matar, Jae Ko, John Ruppert and Amelie Wang.
For the art students who just returned to school, there are paintings by the late Hartigan, the legendary abstract expressionist painter who made Maryland Institute College of Art’s Hoffberger program a nationally respected degree. This particular exhibit features her “Lexington Market Series,” which renders verdant, abundant produce and vendors at the beloved food hall. The sculptures of Ruppert, an esteemed University of Maryland, College Park professor, are dramatic metal castings that reference a strike of lightning, both violent and solid. This group show also includes a print by another abstract expressionistic painter, de Kooning, that was inspired by a trip to Lascaux, referencing Paleolithic cave paintings of deer, bison and goats dancing across rough surfaced walls.
Lebanese photographer Matar’s color-soaked photos of female-identifying figures, mysteriously draped in human-made patterns and fabrics, invoke an independent spirit. She has long used photography to explore the relationship between personal agency and reverence for community, always centering the female figure and comparing the way they are viewed in the United States versus the Middle East.
It is customary for summer group exhibitions to include brand new artists to the gallery as well, an opportunity to test their work during the gallery’s quietest season. Recent MICA graduate Wang is included in “Summer ‘24,” presenting mysterious figures in poetic settings, sumptuous with color and masked by swirls of painted gesture. Like Matar, Wang explores a complicated relationship between her identity in the U.S. and her home country, offering a nuanced perspective of layered cultural difference and alluding to China’s deeply censored history.