Louise Kruger: 1924-2013

A Memorial Exhibition

September 4 – October 4, 2014

Louise Kruger
Untitled (Head)
c. 1960-65
Wood
19 x 7 x 8 inches
(LBFA #LK-6766)

Louise Kruger
Standing Woman (Painted Eyes)
c. 1970
Polychromed wood
73 x 22 x 22 inches
(LBFA #4743)

Louise Kruger
Standing Dog
c. 1970-75
Pine
27 x 16 x 38 inches
(LBFA #4730)

Louise Kruger
Untitled (Woman)
c. 1970-80
Woodblock print on rice paper
79 x 29 ½ inches
Edition 1 1
(LBFA #3654.1)

Louise Kruger
Untitled (Man)
c. 1970-80
Woodblock print on rice paper
79 x 29 ½ inches
Edition 1 1
(LBFA #3655.1)

Louise Kruger
Hand
c. 1965
Wood
49 1/2 x 24 x 11 inches
(LBFA #LK-6789)

Louise Kruger
Owl
c. 1955
Tin on wood
19 x 6 1/4 x 7 3/4 inches
(LBFA #LK-6762)

Louise Kruger
Porcupine
c. 1955
Mixed media
12 x 15 1/2 x 6 1/4 inches
(LBFA #LK-6763)

Louise Kruger
Farmer
c. 1965
Cherry
74 x 31 x 16 inches
(LBFA #1273)
 

Louise Kruger
Seated Woman at Window
c. 1975
Wood
75 x 50 x 25 inches
(LBFA #1268)

Louise Kruger
Untitled
Late 1950s
Cedar
30 x 25 x 9 ½ inches
(LBFA #4137)

Louise Kruger
Untitled (Salute)
c. 1969-73
Embroidered fabric and buttons
115 x 58 inches
(LBFA #2657)

Press Release

Lori Bookstein Fine Art is pleased to announce an exhibition of sculpture by Louise Kruger. This is the artist's fourth solo-show with the gallery.

This exhibition will serve as a memorial to the late artist, who passed away in October of 2013. Although Kruger practiced her work across a variety of media including wood, bronze, silver, fabric and prints, Louise Kruger: 1924-2013 will focus on the artist’s celebrated carved wood sculptures dating from the mid-fifties to the late eighties.

This show presents a cast of distinctive figures and animals including a farmer, a woman seated at a window, and an oversized spider. Frequently confounding and simple in form, Kruger’s sculptures are often rough-hewn and their assembly of wing nuts, screws and blots are all highly visible. Like an editor of the human body, she elides certain features while insistently remarking upon others. Although they certainly draw influence from American Folk Art, African Tribal Art and even sculptor Elie Nadelman, they maintain the artist’s own formal quirks. Indeed, a disarmingly folksy craftsmanship is as easily the backdrop for genuine playfulness and whimsical exploration as it is for incisive political and feminist concerns. At times, her message is stark and precise, while at other times, the meaning is more ambiguous and urges the viewer to complete subtle innuendos that would otherwise go unnoticed. 

Louise Kruger (1924 - 2013) attended Scripps College, Claremont, CA and The Art Students League of New York. In addition to her formal education, she studied woodworking and joinery with a ship builder in New Jersey and traditional metal-working techniques at foundries in Pistoia, Italy and Kumasi, Ghana. The artist has been exhibited widely including exhibitions at Martha Jackson Gallery, Schoelkopf Gallery, Landmark Gallery, and Condeso/Lawler Gallery. Most notably, in 1953, she was included in the New Talent show at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Kruger’s work is included in several public collections including the Brooklyn Museum, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Museum of Modern Art and the New York Public Library.

Louise Kruger: 1924-2013 will be on view from September 4 - October 4, 2014. An opening reception will be held on Thursday, September 4th from 6-8 pm. Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday, 10:30 am to 6:00 pm. For additional information and/or visual materials, please contact the Joseph Bunge at (212) 750-0949 or by email at joseph@loribooksteinfineart.com.