Glenn Goldberg's Patchwork Universe

Glenn Goldberg, Guy 2 (Snow), 2011, Acrylic and ink on canvas, the New York Studio School. Photo: courtesy of the artist

To get an idea of the curious byways an artist might find himself exploring, here, in the twenty-first century, you can’t do better than head to the New York Studio School’s “Glenn Goldberg: Plums and Breezes,” an adumbrated, if somewhat bumpy, overview spanning forty years. “Plums and Breezes” begins in 1977, when Goldberg entered the Studio School as a student, and works its way to pieces of a more recent vintage by the now–Associate Professor of Painting at Queens College. Goldberg’s trajectory, and more so his landing place, offer an example of how quixotic the artist’s lot has become. Contemporary artists work in a media landscape teeming with imagery, not to mention a culture inured to the notion that art is an endeavor free of standards or definition. Creative types have been left to their own devices in ways that were unimaginable one hundred, let alone five hundred, years ago. The challenge of operating within this increasingly fluid playing field isn’t realizing an individual vision, but instead making that vision matter. Given the rabbit holes into which artists ensconce themselves nowadays, the big question is why the rest of us should feel obliged to follow. READ MORE…

Glenn Goldberg: Of Leaves and Clouds

FreedmanArt

Opening Saturday, March 5, 2016

FreedmanArt is pleased to present "Of Leaves and Clouds," an invitational exhibition featuring paintings, works on paper, and collages by the New York artist Glenn Goldberg, opening Saturday, March 5, 2016, with a reception for the artist from 5:30pm-8:00pm. The subject, "Of Leaves and Clouds," will include themes present throughout decades of Goldberg’s work.

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An Adventure that is always changing: Glenn Goldberg in conversation with ArtFile Magazine's Johnny Thornton

Artfile Magazine
by Johnny Thornton

March 2016

“...The idea of making a painting that is quiet, at times a bit complicated and stirred, yet ordered and dreamy is at the center of these works. They are airy and do not assert themselves as matter. For the most part, they tend to exist in the sky or in the water. They incorporate aspects of the decorative arts and are concerned with both what a painting can be and what painting already is. I am lost inside of them. They include questions and have their own demands. They always want to be more than they are. It is difficult to be legible, challenging to be generous, and an effort to push through a variety of obstacles in order to give fully to them.”