| DEBORAH REMINGTON
(American, b.1930)
Exodus
Signed and dated ’60; signed and dated on the reverse
Oil on canvas
70” X 60 3/4”
Provenance
Crown Zellerbach Corporate Collection, San Francisco (acquired in 1960)
Deborah Remington was raised in Southern New Jersey and obtained her
BFA at the Art Institute of San Francisco, just at the time (1955)
when the beat movement there was at its height. She exhibited her
work at the King Ubu Gallery in San Francisco in 1953. Shortly
after, the King Ubu Gallery closed and its space on Fillmore Street was
occupied by the avant-garde “6” Gallery, founded early 1955
by the poet Jack Spicer and five of his students from the art Institute,
including Remington and Manuel Neri. The “6” Gallery
exhibited paintings, had poetry readings (Alan Ginsberg first read “Howl” there
in October, 1955), showed experimental films and hosted Jazz performances. From
its inception, it was a hub for the beat Generation of San Francisco,
which included local painters of Abstract Expressionism.
The Present work is a Key example from the early and emergent phase
of her career when she was a central figure in the groundbreaking Abstract
Expressionist movement in particular and the Beats in general.
PA02K7-112
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