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Margot Bergman

Past exhibition
June 30 - August 26, 2016
  • Overview
  • Installation Views
  • Works
  • Press
Overview
Margot Bergman Auntie Gladyce, 2012 Acrylic on found canvas Canvas: 23 3/4 x 17 3/4 inches (60.32 x 45 cm) Frame: 25 1/2 x 19 1/2 in (64.77 x 49.53 cm)
Margot Bergman
Auntie Gladyce, 2012
Acrylic on found canvas
Canvas: 23 3/4 x 17 3/4 inches
(60.32 x 45 cm)
Frame: 25 1/2 x 19 1/2 in
(64.77 x 49.53 cm)

For her debut solo exhibition in New York, Anton Kern Gallery has invited Chicago-based painter Margot Bergman (b.1934) to present a body of recent portraits. Paired with Bergman’s work is a selection of early drawings and paintings by Brian Calvin (b.1969), from the Popeye series created during his time in Chicago in the early 1990s. These side by side exhibitions depict the human figure and all its grotesque facets, and reflect the painterly Neo-Expressionist sensibilities of the Chicago art scene. With an emphasis on building up paint, working and reworking their materials, both artists create layers; Bergman in a physical sense and Calvin in a more figurative sense.

 

Margot Bergman builds layers of paint atop found artworks. The interplay between elements of the found works she exposes and her own additions creates distorted and uncanny forms, reminiscent of Modernist collage. Her constructed ‘double-portraits’ converge into a single subject. With titles like Auntie Gladyce, Gloria Jean, and Patty, each painting possesses a unique personality, a soul. This process of prosopopoeia stems from the artist’s relationship with the found paintings, who she has “rescued” from flea markets and kept in her home. As Bergman explains, “It was a process - living with them, understanding what I was looking for, beginning to draw it out, slowly and without a plan, responding to the original paintings. I didn’t know what the next step would be. Once I found my way to the portraits, it was magical for me.”

 

When Brian Calvin moved from Berkeley to Chicago in the early 1990s, his predisposition toward painterly figuration was broadened through local influences such as the Imagists and the Hairy Who, resulting in a tonal shift in his painting. In his ‘Popeye’ works, Calvin renders the stark cartoon figure in thickly applied paint against a dark brooding background, paused amid mundane activities such as smoking a cigarette, standing in the rain, lying awake in bed. The contrast and stillness creates a sense of unease and focuses the viewer’s attention on the subject’s gestures. Calvin subverts Popeye’s inherent cartoon lightness by reimagining himself in an alternate reality, restaging him in a bleak psychological landscape. With the memory accumulated from drawing this iconic character repeatedly in his youth, Calvin uses the figure’s instantly recognizable shape, and it’s associations, as a vessel for ruminations on pathos.

 

Margot Bergman, born in 1934, has been an active member of the Chicago art scene since the 1950s. Her works often deal with the interplay between found works and her own painterly interventions. Recent exhibitions include Body Doubles, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2015); Unbound: Contemporary Art after Frida Kahlo, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2014); INNER SIGHT/INSIGHT: Driven to Dare, Governors State University, University Park, IL (2014); Look at Me: Portraiture from Manet to the Present, Leila Heller Gallery, New York (2014); Dialogue Chicago: Taking Chances, Noyes Cultural Arts Center, Evanston, IL (2013).

Download Press Release
List of Works
Installation Views
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Shot in the main gallery.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Another view of several portraits in the main gallery.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Several works featured.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Four works in the main gallery shown.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Four more works.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. An additional four works.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Three portraits featured.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Two more works.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. Three works featured.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. A few more works in the main gallery.
  • Installation view of Margot Bergman's show. One large work presented.
Works
  • Margot Bergman Kelly, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    Kelly, 2015
  • Margot Bergman Grace Jane, 2012
    Margot Bergman
    Grace Jane, 2012
  • Margot Bergman Gloria Jean, 2011
    Margot Bergman
    Gloria Jean, 2011
  • Margot Bergman CJ, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    CJ, 2015
  • Margot Bergman Auntie Gladyce, 2012
    Margot Bergman
    Auntie Gladyce, 2012
  • Margot Bergman Hazel, 2011
    Margot Bergman
    Hazel, 2011
  • Margot Bergman Beth Jo, 2012
    Margot Bergman
    Beth Jo, 2012
  • Margot Bergman Wilma Rose, 2012
    Margot Bergman
    Wilma Rose, 2012
  • Margot Bergman Hillary, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    Hillary, 2015
  • Margot Bergman Jo, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    Jo, 2015
  • Margot Bergman Foxy Dee, 2012
    Margot Bergman
    Foxy Dee, 2012
  • Margot Bergman Audrey Ray, 2012
    Margot Bergman
    Audrey Ray, 2012
  • Margot Bergman Doris, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    Doris, 2015
  • Margot Bergman Patty, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    Patty, 2015
  • Margot Bergman Agnes, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    Agnes, 2015
  • Margot Bergman Bella, 2015
    Margot Bergman
    Bella, 2015
Press
  • Editors’ Picks: 9 Art Events to See in New York This Week 2016

    Eileen Kinsella, artnet artnews, August 15, 2016
    This link opens in a new tab.
  • The Two Faces of GraceJane

    John Yau, HyperAllergic, July 24, 2016
    This link opens in a new tab.
  • TimeOut Loves Margot Bergman

    Howard Halle, TimeOut New York, July 6, 2016
    This link opens in a new tab.
  • Must See: Margot Bergman

    Artforum artguide, July 1, 2016

Related artist

  • Margot Bergman

    Margot Bergman

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