Artist: Marcia Widenor
Artist Nationality: American
Artist Dates: B. 1930s
Title: Marking Space (Installation)
Date: 1996
Condition: Good
Medium: Wooden dowels and black linen thread installation
Dimensions: Varied
Estimated Value:
Signature/Markings: N/A
All donated works of art by Marcia Widenor come with access to the artist's digitized archival materials.
“”Marking Space” is… a group of hangings, but her [Widenor’s] elements are linear rather than flat. She has wrapped wood dowels with linen thread and suspended them from the ceiling, so the viewers may walk around and into the area they define. To me, the result is a kind of spatial drawing using an infinitely variable configuration of marks. It also has a sinister overtone, suggesting a dark rain, burdened with soot, streaking downward.” – Helen A. Harrison, The New York Times, January 22, 2006
Bio:
Marcia Widenor has been working as a full time artist since the 1980s, focusing her practice around handmade paper constructions and experiential installations. While she has lived and worked in Sea Cliff on New York’s Long Island for decades, her upbringing in the Midwest continuously influences her work. Cloth collages evoke small towns in Illinois and Ohio, knitted trees of handmade paper pay homage to the great Elm trees that once lined her childhood street, and themes of safety and refuge recur throughout her portfolio.
Widenor departed the Midwest as a young woman to study art history at Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, ultimately marrying and settling in Sea Cliff where she would raise her family. As her children grew up and left home, she went back to school to earn a degree in social work, which she put to use working with children in hospitals. Widenor had been making art casually since childhood, but after retiring from her social work career in the ’80s, put her efforts into becoming a full time artist. She studied under important Long Island artists to progress her technical knowledge, and went on to produce an intricate body of work that communicates tranquility, sanctuary, community, and a respect for nature. Through her work, Widenor invites viewers to exhale and let their guard down, encouraging a childlike vulnerability by creating welcoming, safe spaces.
Widenor has been the subject of multiple solo exhibitions in the United States and exhibited internationally in France, South Korea, and Iceland. She has likewise been featured in numerous group shows, many of which took place on Long Island alongside fellow local artists. Collaboration with the Long Island arts community, particularly in regards to handmade paper, became an influential component of Widenor’s practice, as she frequently exhibited with other artists, curators, and institutions on multiple occasions. She has been commissioned to create stage designs for theatrical dance performances at institutions that include Stony Brook University, and invited to curate nearly a dozen exhibitions at spaces like the Hillwood Art Museum in Brookville, NY, and Gallery North in Setauket, NY. Her work is included in the collections of the Bates College Museum of Art, Lewiston, ME; American Paper Company, Pound Ridge, NJ; Queensborough Community College Museum, Bayside, NY; Islip Museum of Art, East Islip, NY; Clinton White House, Washington, D.C.; Godrej and Boyce, Bombay, India; and more.
Provenance:
The Artist
Exhibition History:
2006 – Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery; Art League of Long Island, Dix Hills, NY
2006 – DI-MEN’SHəN, Art League of Long Island, Jeanie Tengelsen Gallery, Dix Hills, NY
Publication History: