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Beth Lipman  de Rigueur Extended

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BRIDE
2010
glass/mixed media
112 X 91 X 73 inches
187-0088
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WHATNOT I
2010
glass/wood
82 X 44 X 28 inches
187-0089
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WHATNOT II
2010
glass/wood
84 X 44 X 34 inches
187-0090
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STILL LIFE WITH BOTTLES, MELONS, AND BOWL OF FRUIT 1/3
2008
C print on plexi, framed
48 X 82 X 1 1/2 inches
187-0079
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BREAD, CHALICES, BOTTLES AND FLOWERS 1/3
2008
C print on plexi, framed
43 X 69 X 1 1/2 inches
187-0080
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STILL LIFE WITH GRAPES 1/3
2007
C print, framed
29 X 36 X 1 1/2 inches
187-0047
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FRUIT IN A FOOTED BOWL
2/6, 2007
C print, framed
27 1/2 X 21 1/4 X 1 1/2 inches
187-0064
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MEMENTO 1
Beth Lipman & Ingalena Klenell
2010
glass
11 1/2 X 20 X 16 inches
187-0091
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MEMENTO 8
Beth Lipman & Ingalena Klenell
2010
glass
9 X 20 X 16 inches
187-0093
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MEMENTO 9
Beth Lipman & Ingalena Klenell
2010
glass
12 1/2 X 20 X 16 inches
187-0094
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MEMENTO 12
Beth Lipman & Ingalena Klenell
2010
glass
18 1/4 X 20 X 16 inches
187-0095
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Beth Lipman takes new ownership of the still-life genre combining social commentary with a personal narrative in two major installations created for the de Rigueur exhibition.

In the Bride Lipman presents the wedding as a fulcrum in a woman’s life in which the exquisite emblematically collides with the quotidian and a woman’s desire for purity, order and beauty is constantly frustrated by the chaos of daily life. The piece is a 10-ft. tall five-tier dessert stand filled with glass objects. The top tier is set with an orderly crown of candles, which gives way to a tier of stemware. The third layer contains a fuller arrangement of cups and bowls and below them is an opulent laid table-like installation. The lowest layer explodes with an overwhelming assemblage of all the parts from tiers above. The Bride, like life itself, goes from order to chaos or chaos to order depending on which direction your eye travels. Lipman uses the height and stratification of the piece to prevent us from seeing it in its entirety and therefore from actually or visually possessing it. In doing so she reexamines her questions about the complex relationships between satisfaction, knowledge, and the human desire to possess.

The Whatnots take their name from a piece of furniture popular in England in the 19th century, designed to contain various collectibles. Lipman’s version consists of two wooden multi-shelf corner units, which hold a collection of souvenirs from her own life remade in black glass, a material synonymous with Victorian mourning jewelry. Understanding the intimate connection between the souvenirs – many of them gifts to the artist from other artists – makes these Whatnots autobiographical. Taken out of context they demonstrate the banality of our object-obsessed lifestyles.

Beth Lipman studied at the Massachusetts College of Art in Boston and holds a B.F.A. from the Tyler School of Art in Philadelphia, PA. Her work is included in the collections of the Brooklyn Museum of Art, Brooklyn, NY; the Milwaukee Art Museum, Milwaukee, WI; the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC; the Speed Museum, Louisville, KY; the Corning Museum of Glass, Corning, NY, and the RISD Museum of Art, Providence, RI as well as private collections nationwide.

Lipman has received critical acclaim from the Boston Globe and the New York Times for her 2008 solo exhibition After You’re Gone, at the Rhode Island School of Design Museum of Art in Providence, RI. Calling her work ‘wonderfully original,’ the Boston Globe suggested, that she ‘is definitely someone to watch.’

©  Heller Gallery 2010



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