OPEN
STUDIO
painting, drawing
and more
Silent auction, raffle, art work for sale
DECEMBER 30th, 6 - 10 pm
9401 Linden Avenue
Bethesda, MD, 20814
RSVP (301) 801 3308
Since 2003... the 11th highest ranked art blog on the planet! And with over SEVEN million visitors, F. Lennox Campello's art news, information, gallery openings, commentary, criticism, happenings, opportunities, and everything associated with the global visual arts scene with a special focus on the Greater Washington, DC area.
This year, at the age of 101, Herrera finally received recognition as a pioneer of 20th-century abstract painting. The Cuban-born, New York-based artist was celebrated in a major survey exhibition at the Whitney Museum of American Art this fall; a show of her new paintings christened Lisson Gallery’s New York space in the spring; and she featured in a full-length documentary released on Netflix in September—all of which served to land her name in the press and in the canon like never before.
At the Whitney, “Carmen Herrera: Lines of Sight” exposed the art world to her formative years, the period of 1948–1978, including many works that had never been on public view. Over these three decades she worked prolifically and ran among prominent artist circles in New York and Paris, with the likes of Josef Albers and Barnett Newman. And she honed her signature style—canvases filled with striking geometric shapes characterized by crisp lines, sharp angles, and bold shocks of color. “We can see in the works in ‘Lines of Sight’ that Herrera was thinking about the painting as an object—using panel divisions and the sides of canvases, and incorporating the surrounding environment—in the early 1950s,” says Whitney curator Dana Miller, who helmed Herrera’s exhibition there. “This is at the same time or before other artists, who have been previously heralded for such developments, first began to undertake similar experiments,” Miller adds.
While the artist has been active in New York since 1954, and has been exhibited across the world since the 1930s, it was not until 2004 that she sold a work. She has been counted among key forces behind Latin America’s rich history of geometric abstraction, yet not until now has Herrera been properly lauded on the international art-world stage. As Miller put it, “Herrera was, and still is, an artist and a woman ahead of her time, and we are all just beginning to catch up to her.”Read the above and the rest of The Most Influential Living Artists of 2016 - at least according to the editorial humanoids of Artsy here.
![]() |
“Blanco y Verde.” Credit Carmen Herrera, Private Collection, New York |
At 101, the artist Carmen Herrera is finally getting the show the art world should have given her 40 or 50 years ago: a solo exhibition at a major museum in New York, where she has been living and working since 1954. The show, “Carmen Herrera: Lines of Sight,” caps off several years of festivities, many of which have focused on the artist’s centenarian status, including a documentary film, “The 100 Years Show, Starring Carmen Herrera”; a spring exhibition of recent paintings at the Lisson Gallery in Chelsea; and numerous profiles hailing Ms. Herrera as a living treasure and praising her acerbic wit.
![]() |
“Blue and Yellow” (1965). Credit Carmen Herrera, Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden |
By now, the Kardashian clan is most certainly used to being the subject of copyright infringement claims, seeing as the reality TV-made stars have their hands in just about any product empire you can think of: from cosmetics to diet pills, clothing lines and cars, the Kardashian sisters are no strangers to copyright law litigation.
Read Nicole Martinez in Art Law Journal here.Now, one of the most of-the-moment sisters is being challenged in court. Kylie Jenner’s new cosmetics line, Kylie Cosmetics, has already been the subject of several lawsuits, but the latest focuses on a supposedly intentional ripping-off of an artist’s work. According to visual artist Vlada Haggerty, a Los Angeles-based creator who also dabbles in makeup artistry, Kylie Cosmetics appropriated one of her images for its own social media campaign.
I'm a marvelous housekeeper... every time that I leave a man... I keep his house!
- Zsa Zsa Gábor
The Lilith Plotting. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 12x36 |
The Lilith Plotting (Detail). 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 12x36 |
![]() |
A Woman Planning Her Revenge. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper.12x9 Framed to 20x16 |
![]() |
Pictish Princess. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 12x36 |
![]() |
We Are Wild, Wonderful Things. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 12x9 Framed to 20x16 |
Sonnets to The Portuguese. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 36x36 |
Sonnets to The Portuguese (Detail). 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 36x36 |
![]() |
The Batman Naked. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 12x9 |
![]() |
The Last Copy of The Constitution by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 12x8 |
America Desnuda. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. Framed to 20x16 |
![]() |
The Boy Wonder Naked. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper. 12x9 |
![]() | |
The Eve, Agonizing Over The Sin. 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper.20x10 |
![]() |
Suddenly, She Realized That Crying Wasn't the Solution (And the Light Began to Flood Her) 2016 by F. Lennox Campello. Charcoal and Conte on Paper.14x11 (Framed to 20x16) |