Gladstone presents an exhibition of over sixty rarely seen works, curated by Kathy Halbreich. Familiar with Murray’s oeuvre across mediums.
Read MoreMnuchin Gallery proudly presents ABSTRACTION, an exhibition that delves into the dynamic ways post-war and contemporary artists have defined, challenged, and expanded, our comprehension of abstract art.
Read MoreThe Shah Garg Foundation is pleased to present Making Their Mark, a major exhibition showcasing the works of more than 80 of the most significant women artists from the last eight decades.
Read MoreKarma is pleased to present Painting in New York: 1971–83. This exhibition brings together the work of thirty painters of diverse practice and backgrounds, all of whom were active in New York City in the 1970s and whose lives and works were impacted by the upheavals that radiated from feminism’s second wave.
Read MoreGladstone Gallery is pleased to announce its first exhibition with the Estate of Elizabeth Murray after announcing representation in the summer of 2020.
Read MoreWhy Buffalo? Perhaps she thought that Western New York was conveniently accessible to Manhattan? That would have been wishful thinking.
Read MoreMany archival gems are featured in Back in Town, the homecoming exhibition organized by Robert Scalise and Jason Andrew at the University of Buffalo’s Anderson Gallery.
Read MoreIn a happy juxtaposition, both paintings are included in the exhibition, providing useful markers, beyond those of pure historicity, for a non-linear overview of her work.
Read MoreThe exhibition that originated at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, travels to the Carnegie for an extended run.
Read MoreUB's Robert Scalise has curated "Elizabeth Murray: Back in Town" to focus on how Murray's time in Buffalo shaped her artistic style.
Read MoreUniversity at Buffalo Art Galleries to present the first major posthumous survey of work by pioneering artist Elizabeth Murray
Read MoreWild Life is the first institutional presentation of Murray’s work in Texas since the historic 1987 traveling exhibition Elizabeth Murray: Paintings and Drawings at the Dallas Museum of Art. It is the first presentation of Reaves’s work in the south, as well as the first exhibition to survey her work of the last five years.
Read Morehis summer, Camden Arts Centre will present the first institutional exhibition in the UK of Elizabeth Murray
Read MoreA new Anderson Collection exhibit looks back on an
artist unconstrained by the frame.
Elizabeth Murray’s work expands the definition of painting and challenges its conventions. This installation at the Anderson Collection focuses on large-scale shaped, multipart canvases and related works on paper composed of dynamic forms in striking color, both from within and outside of the museum’s collection.
Read MoreFeaturing more than ninety works from the museum’s permanent collection as well as several loans, Approaching Landscape considers how artists depict natural, built, and imaginary environments as ways to explore the complex relationships humans have with the places they choose to inhabit.
Read MoreTaking place across Victoria Miro's London galleries, this international, cross-generational exhibition is a celebration of women artists who have shaped and transformed, and continue to influence and expand, the language and definition of abstract painting.
Read MoreArtforum: The twenty-five works in “Elizabeth Murray: Painting in the ‘80s” made it absolutely clear why she became one of the leading American paintings of that decade, even though her work—no more neo-expressionist than neo-geo—didn’t really fit in which anything else going on.
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Pace Gallery is pleased to present its ninth exhibition since 1996 devoted to the work of Elizabeth Murray. The exhibition draws together sixteen paintings created by the artist in the 1980s, including loans from the Colby College Museum of Art, The Museum of Modern Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.
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