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Charles Cajori

Turbulent Space, Shifting Colors
521 West 26th Street, 1st Floor
17 October - 16 November 2024
Charles Cajori, Untitled, 1978
Untitled, 1978
OPENING RECEPTION
Saturday, October 19, 2:00-5:00PM
A discussion with the art historian John Seed begins at 2PM
RSVP: rsvp@hollistaggart.com or +1 212 628 4000

Known for blending bold abstraction with figural experimentation, Cajori’s canvases display a mastery of color and dynamism.

On October 17, Hollis Taggart will open Turbulent Space, Shifting Colors, Abstract Expressionist artist Charles Cajori’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. Known for blending bold abstraction with figural experimentation, Cajori’s canvases display a mastery of color and dynamism. Charles Cajori: Turbulent Space, Shifting Colors is the first exhibition of the artist’s work in NYC in nearly in a decade, and will function as a “mini-retrospective,” featuring works from the early 1950s to the late 1970s. The exhibition will be on view from October 17 through November 16, 2024, and will be celebrated with an opening reception on Saturday, October 19, from 2-5PM, with a discussion with the art historian John Seed starting at 2PM.

On October 17, Hollis Taggart will open Turbulent Space, Shifting Colors, Abstract Expressionist artist Charles Cajori’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. Known for blending bold abstraction with figural experimentation, Cajori’s canvases display a mastery of color and dynamism. Charles Cajori: Turbulent Space, Shifting Colors is the first exhibition of the artist’s work in NYC in nearly in a decade, and will function as a “mini-retrospective,” featuring works from the early 1950s to the late 1970s. The exhibition will be on view from October 17 through November 16, 2024, and will be celebrated with an opening reception on Saturday, October 19, from 2-5PM, with a discussion with the art historian John Seed starting at 2PM.

 

While Charles Cajori (1921-2013) is most often classified as a second generation Abstract Expressionist, his work resists easy categorization. Though heavily influenced by this burgeoning art movement that was exploding in the downtown New York City art scene when he arrived in the city in 1946, Cajori was usually interested in depicting something specific – a landscape or figure – regardless of whether this was apparent in his completed paintings. Combining observation with experimentation, Cajori was interested in studying and pushing the limits of space and form, resulting in marvelous swaths of color that captured what he called “the swift continuum of space.” Even in the works where Cajori’s figural forms are more visible, their relationships to their abstract environments remain undefined, demonstrating Cajori’s remarkable ability to seamlessly transition from figuration to abstraction.

 

Cajori’s influence on the Postwar New York art world cannot be overstated. As a founding member of the Tanager Gallery on 10th Street in 1952, Cajori and his friends – including co-founders William King, Lois Dodd, Fred Mitchell, and Angelo Ippolito – created a space that became a critical meeting point and collaborative exhibition space for artists that provided an alternative to the more established galleries of 57th Street. In 1964, Cajori also co-founded the New York Studio School, a unique art school that emphasized a studio-driven, European-style “atelier” approach to artmaking which still exists today. Throughout his life, Cajori taught at various schools including Cooper Union (1956-1965), Berkeley (1959-1960), and Queens College (1965-1986), influencing the future generation of artists, including Jack Whitten, Douglas Florian, and David Reed, among many others. Turbulent Space, Shifting Colors will be accompanied by an illustrated catalogue with an essay by the art historian John Seed, which includes a biographical overview of the artist’s extraordinary career.

 

For more information about Turbulent Space, Shifting Colors, please contact us at info@hollistaggart.com or +1 212.628.4000.

For press inquiries, please contact Aga Sablinska at aga.sablinska@gmail.com or +1 862.216.6485.

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