STEVEN CUSHNER

March 16 – April 27, 2024

THE WIND BLOWS THE CLOUDS AWAY
2024
acrylic on canvas
58 x 52 inches

Untitled #4
2023
acrylic on paper
23 1/4 x 18 1/4 inches

After the Storm #2
2022
acrylic on canvas
34 x 42 inches

The Wind Blows the Clouds Away #2
2023
acrylic on canvas
77 x 78 inches

Sunset
2022
acrylic on paper
19 x 26 1/4 inches

Cloudburst #2
2023
acrylic on canvas
77 x 78 inches

The Wind Blows the Clouds Away #3
2023
acrylic on canvas
28 x 24 inches

Untitled #7
2023
acrylic on paper
21 x 18 1/8 inches

After the Storm #3
2022
acrylic on canvas
58 x 75 inches

After the Storm #1
2022
acrylic on canvas
109 x 136 inches

CLOUDBANK
2024
acrylic on canvas
65 x 142 inches

Cloudburst
2024
acrylic on paper
36 x 31 inches

Sunset #2
2022
acrylic on paper
19 x 21 1/8 inches

Cloudburst #1
2023
acrylic on canvas
74 x 66 inches

The differentiation of visual artwork as abstract or representational stubbornly persists. Similar to the artificial divide between the conceptual and the beautiful. These have become tired and tedious arguments. Nevertheless, these designations resist dissolving one into the other. But are we not able to see both ways simultaneously? Is not every artwork both? Rather than looking at the history of Modernism through the pedagogical logic of -isms, we could see the modern art history of these opposing positions as one mutually continuous effort. This way of seeing art is more natural to the contemporary viewer than the clever after-the-fact breakthrough following an explanation. Interpreting a painting is feeling a painting; feeling a painting is inseparable from interpreting a painting -- duh. 

A few years ago, Cushner sat on a beach, notebook in hand, and his mind wandered. He looked out at the skyscape above the ocean and wondered about the majestic, moody, threatening, light-reflecting, color-capturing, and soon-to-evaporate. He asked himself, "What can I do with this?" Merging the abstract and representational without argument in a uniquely unpretentious way, Cushner employed his now famous approach to painting, answering the question he posed himself that day on the beach.

STEVEN CUSHNER consists of paintings and works on paper from 2022-2024.  Cushner was born in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1954. He received a Bachelor of Fine Art from Rhode Island School of Design in 1976 and a Master of Fine Art in painting from the University of Maryland in 1980. He is the recipient of fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the DC Commission on the Arts & Humanities. His work has been exhibited at many galleries nationally and is included in numerous private and public collections, including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC, the American University Museum, Washington, DC, and the Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT.