Tara Donovan

Tara Donovan
Born 1969
Flushing, New York
Nationality American
Education BFA, Corcoran College of Art and Design, 1991
MFA, Virginia Commonwealth University, 1999
Known for Sculpture
Awards MacArthur Fellow, 2008

Tara Donovan (born 1969 in Flushing, Queens in New York City) is an American sculptor who lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She is known for site-specific installation art that utilizes everyday materials whose form is in keeping with generative art and organic subject matter.

Early life

Although she was born in New York City, Donovan grew up in Rockland County in a small town called Blauvelt.[1]:138 Her father owned an Irish pub on Wall Street, and her mother was an executive secretary in the stock market.[1]:138 Tara was the middle child of three siblings, with one older sister and one younger brother.

Education

Donovan's studies began at the School of Visual Arts (New York) in 1987-88.[1]:139 Donovan received her BFA at the Corcoran College of Art and Design (Washington DC) in 1991. It wasn't until college, at the Corcoran College of Art and Design in Washington DC that she began to consider herself a sculptor. On her time at Corcoran College, Donovan said "I think I was learning how to think abstractly".[1]:139[2]

Tara went back to graduate school at Virginia Commonwealth University to complete a two-year program. While going to graduate school Tara worked full-time and also created works for a solo show in Washington DC. She earned her MFA at VCUarts, part of Virginia Commonwealth University (VCU) in 1999, when she also received her first interview in Articulate Contemporary Art Review.

Donovan tended bar and waited tables for six years, and didn't quit her day job until 2003, when her first New York solo show, at the Ace Gallery, proved a breakout success.[3] Donovan began entering regional art shows to display her works until she helped create her own gallery space in an old converted DC nightclub called the "Insect Club".

In 2000 Donovan participated in the Whitney Biennial. After that Donovan lived and worked as a waitress in New York when she was contacted by Doug Chrismas to show a piece in the Ace Gallery in Los Angeles. This meeting was a breakthrough show for Donovan leading to more opportunities and shows in and out of NYC.

Exhibitions

In 1998, Donovan held her first solo exhibition, Resonances, at Hemphill Fine Arts in Washington DC. In the same year, she exhibited New Sculpture at Reynolds Gallery in Richmond, Virginia. From 1999 to 2000 Donovan exhibited Whorl at Hemicycle Gallery, Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington Upon receiving the call that she would be exhibiting this site-specific installation, Donovan is quoted as saying "I screamed and ran around in circles ... What do you think?"[4] Following Whorl, Donovan showed a series of exhibitions at Ace Gallery in Los Angeles, CA. In New York May 11, 2006 - April 22, 2006 Donovan had a show at Pace Gallery in New York, where she showed an installation, Untitled (Plastic Cup). This installation was in large scale and resembled a topographic landscape. This was also the third time showing work at this location. The first was in 2005 called Logical Conclusions. The second was a summer group show that same year. In February 12  May 19, 2011, Donovan had another exhibition at the same gallery called Drawings (Pins) where she showcased more than 12 large scale drawings. Some other exhibitions at Pace Gallery include:

  • Tara Donovan: Drawings (Pins), Feb 12, 2011  Mar 19, 2011 included more than twelve drawings
  • Untitled (Mylar), May 4  April 9, 2011
  • Beijing Voice 2011: Leaving Realism Behind, November 9, 2011  February 12, 2012
  • Art Basel Miami Beach, December 5  December 8, 2013
  • Grounded, January 17  February 22, 2014[5]

Donovan has been represented by The Pace Gallery, New York since 2005 and by Stephen Friedman Gallery, London since 2007.

Although many of Donovan's exhibitions were held by Pace Gallery, she also had her work showcased elsewhere, one of which was Rice Gallery in a show called Haze that ran from November 6 to December 14, 2003. For this show she created an installation piece made of everyday materials such as straws, toothpicks, pencils and scotch tape.[6]

Work

Untitled (xxxx)

Donovan's work uses everyday manufactured materials such as Scotch tape, styrofoam cups, paper plates, toothpicks, and drinking straws to create large-scale sculptures that often have a biomorphic quality. Her sculptures must be assembled and disassembled carefully, which sometimes involves an extremely tedious process. With regards to her artistic process, Donovan explained that she chooses the material before she decides what can be done with it. She noted in an interview that she thinks "in terms of infinity, of [the materials] expanding."[3]

In her show at Hemphill Fine Arts Donovan showcased the piece Tar Paper. Taking up most of the gallery's front room it was made with the assistance of friends at Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond and consisted of 120 rolls of tarpaper that were ripped up and placed on the floor. The resulting structure was approximately two feet tall, thirteen and a half feet wide and seventeen and a half feet long. Another piece that was displayed at the Hemphill Fine Arts is titled Untitled (toothpicks). It was a standing cube constructed with thousands of toothpicks pressed together.

Whorl shown at Manhattan's Whitney Museum of American Art was made out of 100 percent nylon fiber under the name of Allied Signal Product Code 30039. 8,000 pounds of the fiber was bundled and trimmed into tiny puffs that were then piled onto the floor. About her piece Donovan said "I'm playing around with the idea of mimicking nature by referencing the organic processes through which things actually grow. I want to create the feeling that it could take over the space in the way mold could." The piece spirals out from the center of the room in a fashion similar to Robert Smithson's "Jetty." [7]

Her work was featured in the Whitney Biennial in 2000 and the All Soviet Exhibition. She was the recipient of the Alexander Calder Foundation's first annual Calder Prize in 2005. In 2006 her work was featured in a solo exhibition at The Pace Gallery in New York,[8] the gallery that has represented her since 2005. Donovan presented new works in a 2011 solo show at Pace entitled Drawings (Pins). Donovan installed Untitled (Mylar) in November 2007 at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, made of silver Mylar tape.[9] She was the fourth artist selected by the museum for an ongoing series featuring contemporary artists.

Donovan says of her work, "It is not like I'm trying to simulate nature. It's more of a mimicking of the way of nature, the way things actually grow."[2] Fellow artist Chuck Close told a reporter that ""At this particular moment in the art world, invention and personal vision have been demoted in favor of appropriation, of raiding the cultural icebox. For somebody to go out and try to make something that doesn't remind you of anybody else's work and is really, truly innovative—and I think Tara's work is—that's very much against the grain of the moment. To me, it represents a gutsy move."[3]

Awards

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Baume, Nicholas; Mergel, Jen; Weschler, Lawernce (2008). Tara Donovan. United States: The Monacelli Press, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, in association with The Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston. ISBN 9781580932134.
  2. 1 2 "Hammer Projects: Tara Donovan". Retrieved 2010-02-09.
  3. 1 2 3 Diane Solway (September 2008). "Grand Illusion". W magazine. Retrieved 2008-11-18.
  4. O'Sullivan, Michael. "Tara Donovan's Power Puff 'Whorls'".
  5. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-01-03. Retrieved 2013-12-20.
  6. "press release" (PDF). The Pace Gallery. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2011-07-27.
  7. "Past Exhibitions: Tara Donovan". Met Museum. Retrieved 2009-05-06.
  • Inside the Artist's Studio, Princeton Architectural Press, 2015. ( ISBN 978-1616893040)
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