|  Red Grooms, Elvis, 1987, color lithograph, 44 1/2 x 30 in., Collection of Walter G. Knestrick. © Red Grooms |
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October 2, 2004 through January 2, 2005
Wachovia Gallery, Doylestown
This lively exhibit covered more than forty years of printmaking by one of
the best-known American artists working today. Red Grooms, who grew up in
Nashville, Tennessee, migrated first to Chicago and then to New York seeking
the excitement of big city culture.
For years he has mined the vitality of
the city, often portraying real people whose lives are stranger than
fiction. From his roots in Nashville he gained a flair for a simplified,
folk idiom and a sympathetic, down-on-your-luck sort of humor that sets his
work apart from more traditional academic styles. His colorful commentaries
on popular culture and the history of art have made him a beloved figure in
the contemporary art world.
Organized by the Tennessee State Museum, this
exhibit focused on Grooms' prints, drawings, and watercolors, and reveals
him to be a master draftsman who has experimented with all facets of
printmaking.
In addition, a show catalogue focusing specifically on Red Grooms:
Selections from the Graphic Work is available with selected pieces
and an essay by the curator. Both catalogues will be on sale in the Museum's
Denoon Gift Shop in Doylestown and the
Museum in New Hope.
ALSO SEE
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