After 28 years, new paintings by Judith Dolnick go on view in Brooklyn

Judith Dolnick, Untitled, 2014, Acrylic on canvas, 34 x 36 in.

ARTFIXdaily: OUTLET FINE ART presents two one-person exhibitions featuring the work of two painters: Judith Dolnick: Paintings and Lucy Mink: comes in the moment so please stay in touch. This exhibition marks the first one-person exhibition of the work of octogenarian Judith Dolnick in New York in nearly three decades and features the first solo exhibition in New York by emerging painter, Lucy Mink. Opening reception for the artists will be held on Friday, May 15, 7-10pm and the exhibition continues weekends 12-6pm through June 28. Exhibition can also be viewed by appointment by calling 646-361-8512.

It has been nearly 30 years since Judith Dolnick has exhibited her lush paintings in New York. Her career began as a tough young artist living on North Wells Street in Chicago in the 1950's. Dolnick along with her husband Robert Natkin, Gerald van de Wiele, and Ann Mattingly opened the Wells Street Gallery, as a reaction to the lack of opportunities to exhibit the expressionistic paintings they were making at the time. While the struggling folk singer Odetta rehearsed upstairs, Dolnick and her crew created what critic Max Kozloff called "an avant-garde exhibition place filled with the most advanced abstractions in town.” The Wells Street Gallery is credited for giving the sculptor John Chamberlain his first solo exhibition. When Dolnick moved to New York City in 1959 she began exhibiting alongside such seminal abstract artists as Willem de Kooning, Richard Diebenkorn and Franz Kline at the prestigious Ellie Poindexter Gallery. In the 1980s she was represented by Gimpel & Weitzenhoffer Gallery. Her last solo exhibition was held there in 1987 and was reviewed by Michael Brenson in The New York Times who called her work the answer to “Matisse, Kandinsky and Dufy.”

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Art Fair: Dolnick at Intersect Palm Springs (Feb 9-12)

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From the Archive: Artforum (Summer 1987)