Lenore Tawney (born Leonora Agnes Gallagher; May 10, 1907 – September 24, 2007) was an American artist working in fiber art, collage, assemblage, and drawing.
While living in Chicago, she met George Tawney, a young psychologist, through friends. In 1941 the two married, but 18 months later George passed away suddenly. His untimely death provided her with the means to pursue her creative work without financial constraints. After he passed, she moved to Urbana, Illinois to be near his family and enrolled at the University of Illinois to study art therapy from 1943-1945.
Because of her unorthodox weaving methods, Tawney was spurned by both the craft and art worlds, but her distinct style attracted many devoted admirers. Beginning in 1955, Tawney's work became more widely known and consequently, more widely criticized and discussed. In 1957, her friend Margo Hoff wrote the first critical assessment of her work in an article titled, Lenore Tawney: the warp is her canvas for the magazine Craft Horizons. In this article, Tawney reflected that painters liked her work, whereas weavers tended to reject it. Tawney's open-warp weavings were controversial and disrupted longstanding historical traditions and techniques in weaving. Her disruptions signified the beginning of an era of change in the fiber world.
In 1961, Tawney's first solo exhibition, which included forty weavings she had produced since 1955, opened at the Staten Island Museum . This exhibition was the first public display of the artist's new open-warp hangings. In 1961, Tawney studied the Peruvian gauze weave technique with fiber artist Lili Blumenau and pioneered an "open reed" for her loom in order to produce more mutable woven forms. The open reed allowed for warps to be looser and easily manipulated by hand to accommodate Tawney's new visions. Her early tapestries combined traditional with experimental, using the Peruvian gauze weave technique and inlayed colorful yarns to create a painterly effect that appeared to float in space. During this same time, Tawney began working on her well-known Woven Forms series. The Woven Forms were monumental hanging weavings, displayed away from the wall and incorporating negative space. These totem-like sculptural weavings abandoned the rectangular format of traditional tapestries and sometimes included found objects such as feathers and shells. While working on this series, Tawney's color palette transitioned to blacks, whites, and neutrals. The pieces in the Woven Forms series were increasingly large, with the tallest measuring 27 feet tall. Two years later, in 1963, the exhibition Woven Forms at the Museum of Contemporary Crafts (now the Museum of Arts and Design) was organized around her series of the same name. This was the first major exhibition to display the range of new experimentation happening in the fiber discipline and 22 of the 43 pieces were Tawney's.
From 1964-1965 the artist began creating work in drawing, collage, and assemblage. In the Summer of 1964, Tawney saw a Jacquard machine when she visited a label factory in New Jersey. She was interested in how the threads above the loom moved and this experience inspired a series of ink drawings on graph paper. This eight-piece series would later inspire the 1990s series, Drawings in Air, a three dimensional study of lines as threads in space. Tawney suspends threads in space with the help of plexiglass and wood framing. The Drawings in Air series used plexiglass boxes with holes drilled in them to support geometric "drawing" with thread. The threads were again based on the jacquard loom warp tie up that had first caught her eye in 1964.
In 1965, Tawney began to create work in collage and assemblage. Tawney's collages ranged from postcards, books, three-dimensional drawer cases, and completely fabricated chairs. She also experimented with applying collage to woven works. There is overlap between her collage and assemblage pieces since her assemblage often includes collage. The physical elements Tawney collaged with included rare book pages in different languages, photographs, cutouts from newspapers and magazines, cosmological charts, tantric symbols, illustrations from art history books and nature guides, musical scores, and her own drawing and handwriting. Her collages contained a variety of messages from secret to humorous.
An example of the artist's prolific collage work are the postcard collages she sent to family and friends. She began creating postcard collages in the 1960's when she was moving studios frequently and traveling internationally. Some of her collages were created and sent during her travels, as evidenced by international stamps. These small collages on standard sized postcards are an early example of mail art. The artist enjoyed how the application of the postmark dated the work and offered a random addition to the piece. Many examples of these postcard collages are included in the archival collections of artists like Toshiko Takaezu, Maryette Charlton, and Lillian Kiesler in the Archives of American Art.
Tawney made assemblages in a variety of forms from to box constructions, and chests. The artist's mixed media assemblages incorporate small including feathers, twigs, pebbles, string, bones, wood, and eggshells. These delicate, poetic pieces were often spiritual in nature, containing elusive messages about finding inner peace and the fragility of life. She continued to collect and assemble these pieces until her death in 2007. Although Tawney is known primarily for her contributions to fiber art, her collage and assemblage portfolios are extensive and impressive. Tawney's postcard and assemblage constructions filled up two entire exhibitions without textile pieces at the Willard Gallery in 1967 and 1970.
In 1977, Tawney created the first piece in her monumental Clouds series. The artist was commissioned to create a piece for the Federal Building in Santa Rosa, California. There was currently a drought in California and Tawney was inspired to make a cloud. The cloud was made of a canvas support that had thousands of linen threads tied and cascading down into space. The canvas was then attached to a grid structure above. This first piece, "Cloud Series IV" was completed and dedicated in 1978. Tawney continued to create works in this series until 1983. The cloud series were often grand public commissions, but were also sometimes displayed in smaller gallery spaces.
From the late 1950s up until her death in 2007, Tawney lived and worked mainly in New York City, traveling abroad frequently. In her 90's, her vision began to gradually fail, but she continued to make art with the aid of an assistant. In 1989, the artist established the Lenore G. Tawney Foundation, which she endowed her artistic and financial resources to. She created the foundation with the goals of making the visual arts more accessible and to create opportunities for emerging artists. The Lenore G. Tawney Foundation is represented by the gallery, Alison Jacques. "The first hundred years", she said with a smile on her hundredth birthday, "were the hardest." ]]
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