Painter's Life: Talks, Journals, Paintings

Hardback

Main Details

Title Painter's Life: Talks, Journals, Paintings
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Mari Lyons
Edited by Nick Lyons
Introduction by Jed Perl
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:128
Dimensions(mm): Height 215,Width 279
Category/GenreIndividual artists and art monographs
ISBN/Barcode 9781510774346
Audience
General
Illustrations 75 photographs

Publishing Details

Publisher Skyhorse Publishing
Imprint Sky Pony Press
NZ Release Date 28 February 2023
Publication Country United States

Description

A Painter's Lifeis a rare glimpse into the mind of an uncompromising painter. Mari Lyons was a life-long "every-day" painter and from an early journal she kept for a short time she reveals the heartbreaks, the pain of rejection, the intense and abiding love of her work, and the quiet triumphs of a painter juggling the demanding life of a mother of four, a busy husband, constant financial pressure; she had a fierce desire to make ever-better work, and for her work to become more visible in the world. Later talks she gave at the Munson William Proctor Institute and Rider University frame the journal entries with the aesthetic concepts that animate her work. This look at her inner life is made more palpable by a selection of more than eighty-five representative paintings in color, along with sketches and photographs. Mari studied with Max Beckmann as a teenager, and later at Bard College, Yale-Norfolk, and with Stanley William Hayter. Her early work received high praise in college and from her first exhibition at the Polari Gallery in Woodstock when she was nineteen and still a student. She married at twenty-one, had three children in as many years, and then moved from the Midwest to New York City, where her fourth child was born. At first influenced by the Abstract Expressionists of the 1950s, she painted non-objectively but soon found the rich thingness of the world irresistible and her work developed into what she called "painterly figuration." Her journals and notes reveal the intimate details of her long mediation between these two commitments. In time she exhibited regularly at the First Street Gallery in Chelsea and received praise in such places as The Wall Street Journal, The New Republic, The New York Times, The Sun, Forbes FYI, and elsewhere. Today her paintings are in The Museum of the City of New York, The New York State Museum, Bard College, The Montana Historical Society, Mills, Wellesley, and Russell Sage colleges, The Montana Museum of Art, and many other museums and private collections.

Author Biography

Nick Lyons is a former English professor and book publisher, as well as the author and editor of many books on various topics. He lives in New York City. Mari Lyons was married to the publisher Nick Lyons for fifty-eight years. She died at eighty, in 2016, of cancer, and left more than a thousand oil-on-canvas paintings and as many works on paper. Her active website is: www.marilyonsstudio.com. Jed Perl, the distinguished art critic, is the author most recently of the highly praised book Authority and Freedom.

Reviews

". . . she was utterly fearless and also enormously erudite . . . she approached every challenge armed with her dazzling painterly prowess and an encyclopedic understanding of the high art traditions."--Jed Perl ". . . paintings that radiate a constant joy of discovery."--John Seed "Many of the works' titles suggest growth and change. "Expanding Garden," "Flowers Becoming," "Green and Purple Rising." The best paintings find compelling formal expressions for the growth, with what seems to me a renewed, or at least more conscious, investigation of that broad, fertile zone between the abstract and the representational."--John Goodrich "The vertiginous exuberance and vibrant plasticity of her Upper West Side street betray her tutelage under Max Beckmann."--David Cohen "Almost everything in Lyons's paintings is animated, excited, and alive. Pots spin. Surfaces rustle. Flowers feel pressed into or breaking free of, fields of white."--Lance Esplund