Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Abstract painting with vibrant colors and a central figure resembling a person in a white coat with indistinct features.

Mary Lovelace O'Neal: My name is Mary Lovelace O'Neal. 

Narrator: We talked to O’Neal about the painting Twelve Thirty-Four (Doctor Alcocer’s Corsets for Horses Series)

Mary Lovelace O'Neal: That painting, I can tell you about it in this sense, that it was almost not to be because it wasn't cooperating. I cursed it out and took it apart and put it in storage. But for some other reasons, we had to go in and pull out some other work. I was overwhelmed by the spirit of the piece as it came out backwards

It's about painting…It's not complex. I'm not going back to those theoretical times of the sixties and seventies. You know, it had to be flat, it had to be this, and it had to be that, all of the color theorists and all that bullshit. This is about what's in the mind of an eighty, almost eighty-two-year-old woman. I started it when I was seventy-nine, I think…I'm telling you what's going on with that painting and what a surprise it was to me that it had this kind of spiritual bang to it, in addition to just the paint itself.

I recall being really happy just to be whipping it, just to be working with colors and wanting to lick them and pull them out.


Mary Lovelace O'Neal, Self Portrait–She Now Calls Herself Sahara (from the series Two Deserts,Three Winters) c. 1990s. Acrylic paint on canvas, 81 × 138 in. (205.7 × 350.5 cm). Collection of the artist; courtesy Jenkins Johnson Gallery, New York and San Francisco. © Mary Lovelace O'Neal

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On the Hour

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Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

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