Wednesday, December 1, 2021

Artist of the day, December 1, 2021: George Segal, an American painter and sculptor (#1432)

 George Segal (1924 – 2000) was an American painter and sculptor associated with the Pop Art movement. He was presented with the United States National Medal of Arts in 1999.

Although Segal started his art career as a painter, his best known works are cast life-size figures and the tableaux the figures inhabited. In place of traditional casting techniques, Segal pioneered the use of plaster bandages (plaster-impregnated gauze strips designed for making orthopedic casts) as a sculptural medium. In this process, he first wrapped a model with bandages in sections, then removed the hardened forms and put them back together with more plaster to form a hollow shell. These forms were not used as molds; the shell itself became the final sculpture, including the rough texture of the bandages. Initially, Segal kept the sculptures stark white, but a few years later he began painting them, usually in bright monochrome colors. Eventually he started having the final forms cast in bronze, sometimes patinated white to resemble the original plaster.

Segal's figures have minimal color and detail, which give them a ghostly, melancholic appearance. In larger works, one or more figures are placed in anonymous, typically urban environments such as a street corner, bus, or diner. In contrast to the figures, the environments were built using found objects.

Segal was born in New York; his Jewish parents were immigrants from Eastern Europe. His parents ran a butcher shop in the Bronx, then moved to a poultry farm in New Jersey where Segal grew up. He attended Stuyvesant High School, as well as the Pratt Institute, the Cooper Union, and New York University, from which he graduated in 1949 with a teaching degree. In 1946, he married Helen Steinberg and they bought another chicken farm in South Brunswick, New Jersey, where he lived for the rest of his life.

During the few years he ran the chicken farm, Segal held annual picnics at the site to which he invited his friends from the New York art world. His proximity to central New Jersey fostered friendships with professors from the Rutgers University art department. Segal introduced several Rutgers professors to John Cage, and took part in Cage's legendary experimental composition classes. Allan Kaprow coined the term happening to describe the art performances that took place on Segal's farm in the Spring of 1957. Events for Yam Festival also took place there. After his death, he was interred at Washington Cemetery n South Brunswick, New Jersey. His widow, Helen Segal, kept his memory and works alive, until her death in 2014, through the George and Helen Segal Foundation. The foundation continues this mission. George and Helen had three children.

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 Mr. George Segal

 George Segal

1936-78, Appalachian Farm Couple

1961, Man at a Table

1964, Segal's work in Amsterdam

1964-66, The Diner

1965-72, The Costume Party

1967,  Portrait of Sidney Janis with Mondrian Painting

1968, Installation view, Twelve Human Situations, MCA Chicago

1970, Dangling Arm

 1971, Julie: Woman on Telephone

1971, The Dancers

1971, The Restaurant window II

1972, Girl Pinning Up Her Hair

1973 Standing girl looking right

1973, Remembrance of Marcel, a homage to Marcel Duchamp

1975, The embrace

1975, Woman with Hand Under Chin

1976, Girl Standing in Nature

1976, Walk, Don't Walk

1977,  Bus passengers

1978, Abraham and Isaac (In Memory of May 4)

1979, Three Figures and Four Benches

1980, Hand Fragment #2

1981, Girl in White Wicker Chair

1982, The Holocaust

1983, Rush Hour

1983, Woman with Sunglasses on Bench

1987, Abraham’s Farewell to Ishmael

 1989, Woman on white Wicker Rocker

1991, Depression Bread Line

1991, Depression Bread Line

1995, Bus station

1996, The Asian Picnic

1996, Woman Sitting on Bed

1998, Woman on Park Bench

1999, 42nd Street Deli

1999, McDonald's

n.d., The Dinner Table

 

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