Blinky Palermo: Retrospective 1964-1977: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden | Washington, D.C.
Though long celebrated throughout Europe, the influential postwar painter Blinky Palermo (German, b. Leipzig, 1943; d. Maldives, 1977) has mostly escaped America’s notice. This exhibition was the first comprehensive survey of his work in the United States.
Blinky Palermo (born Peter Schwartze) continually expanded the definition of painting throughout his career. The exhibition reflected this progression, following a loose chronology based on his four main bodies of work. Early works illustrated his evolution away from traditional materials as he continued to employ Modernism’s bold colors and geometric forms. Starting in 1964, Palermo’s Stoffbilder (Cloth Pictures), composed of sewn, horizontal strips of commercially available solid-colored fabric mounted on stretchers, took their cues from advertising and fashions of the time. The artist continued to toy with decoration and its intersection with Modernism through site-specific wall paintings, which he carefully documented with preparatory drawings and installation photographs. A number of these framed documents formed the third section of the exhibition. The final phase of Palermo’s career is represented by his Metallbilder (Metal Pictures). An outgrowth of the Cloth Pictures, this series of acrylic paintings on metal culminated with To the People of New York City (1976), a tribute to the city the artist loved and called home from 1973 to 1976 and where he maintained a studio until his sudden death at age thirty-three. Part of Dia’s collection and on long-term view at Dia:Beacon, this multipanel installation was traveling for the first time.