Exhibition News: Elizabeth Murray and Betty Woodman at David Kordansky
Elizabeth Murray and Betty Woodman
March 19 - April 25, 2026
David Kordansky
5130 W Edgewood Pl
Los Angeles
David Kordansky Gallery is pleased to present Elizabeth Murray and Betty Woodman, an exhibition representing over three decades of work by the two artists. The exhibition is on view in Los Angeles at 5130 W. Edgewood Pl. from March 19 through April 25, 2026. An opening reception will take place on Thursday, March 19 from 6–8 PM. The exhibition is accompanied by a commissioned text written by Steve Locke.
Bringing together two formidable artists whose work pushed their respective mediums to new heights, Elizabeth Murray and Betty Woodman highlights the duo’s keen ability to reimagine traditional art forms by foregrounding painterly techniques on untraditional surfaces and deconstructing hierarchies between surface and form. Though working in ostensibly different mediums—Woodman in ceramics, Murray in painting—these artists shared a radical vision that collapsed the binary between two- and three-dimensional space. In the case of their wall-mounted paintings and sculptures, each artist thoughtfully incorporates the wall as a foundational element that their works can interact with and extend upon. Drawing from a period spanning 1982–2015, this presentation juxtaposes Woodman’s ceramic sculptures with Murray’s shaped canvases, revealing parallel investigations into positive and negative space, figure-ground relationships, the domestic sphere, and the architectural possibilities of art
(L to R) Elizabeth Murray, Elizabeth Murray, Flying Bye, 1982. oil on canvas 104 x 80 in (35.5 x 203.2 cm); Betty Woodman, Tropical Vase: 8, 1996. 20 x 29 1/2 x 9 inches, Glazed earthenware; Betty Woodman, Balustrade Relief Vase: 96-20, 1996. glazed earthenware, epoxy resin, lacquer, and paint65 1/2 x 26 3/4 x 8 1/2 inches
Woodman and Murray each deployed exuberant palettes, patterns, and gestural marks drawn from sources as diverse as Matisse, Picasso, Italian Baroque, architecture, Tang Dynasty ceramics, Cubism, and Pop Art—opting to embrace visual pleasure and humor while maintaining a deep engagement with the artistic lineages that informed them. Their maximalist approach to painting treated pattern and color as structural elements equal in importance to line and volume so that color functioned not as a complement to form, but as form itself. For both artists, even in the cases where their compositions completely reinterpret their chosen medium and are literally pieced together, layered, painted, or otherwise distorted, the works maintain a material integrity, so that when viewing the works one can easily recognize their material make-up and therefore contextualize the works within an art historical context. What’s left is a pure encounter with color and form.
This exhibition offers a timely reassessment of two artists whose genre-defying practices presaged contemporary art’s current embrace of hybrid forms and unapologetically diversified approaches. Locke’s essay concludes, “The expansiveness of Murray and Woodman cannot be overstated. Through support and shape they created their own paths of invention through form and they did so without abandoning imagery and connection to history and lived experience. Their respective practices remind us that meaning is made—assembled out of the known and the unknown.” It is through each artist’s deft grasp of their chosen medium and firm understanding of the possibilities that emerge when a material is shaped, warped, and otherwise reimagined, that new associations to disparate influences are continuously made. Their work remains significant and bracingly relevant for discussions about medium specificity, feminist art practice, and the false hierarchies that have long structured art historical discourse.