Mary Heilmann: Inspiration

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Art21 first featured artist Mary Heilmann in 2009
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Learn more about the artist and the original film on PBS.

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Own Season 5 Today: Blu-ray or DVD
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Mary Heilmann is featured in the Art21 episode "Transformation" along with fellow artists Cao Fei, Jeff Koons, and Florian Maier-Aichen.

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Wabi-sabi
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Wabi-sabi is a Japanese aesthetic that defines imperfect, impermanent, and incomplete as beautiful. The term comprises of two words with related but different meanings. "Wabi" is the kind of perfect beauty that is caused by just the right kind of imperfection, such as an asymmetry in a ceramic bowl which reflects the handmade craftsmanship. "Sabi" is the kind of beauty that can come only with age, such as the patina on a very old bronze statue.

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"Costa Mesa" (2005)
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"Costa Mesa" (2005) Oil on canvas, 15 x 9 inches Collection of Judy and Joel Slutzky, Newport Beach

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"Moira" (1998)
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This painting is named after the painter Moira Dryer. "Moira" (1998) Oil on canvas, 75 x 66 inches Michael & Ninah Lynne, New York

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"Two Spot Charm" (1995)
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"Two Spot Charm" (1995) Oil on canvas, 58 x 39 inches Collection of Lisa Spellman, New York

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"Neo Noir" (1998)
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"Neo Noir" (1998) Oil on canvas, 75 x 60 inches Collection of Edward Israel, Los Angeles

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"Carmelita" (2004)
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"Carmelita" (2004) Oil on canvas, 42 x 28 x 1.5 inches Private collection, Switzerland

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"Lovejoy Jr." (2004)
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This painting was inspired by the stained glass windows in the First Church of Springfield, headed by Reverend Timothy Lovejoy, as featured in "The Simpsons" animated television series. "Lovejoy Jr." (2004) Oil on canvas, 40 x 32 inches Collection of Rena Conti and Ivan Moskowitz, Chicago

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The Simpsons - First Church of Springfield
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Check out those windows behind Reverend Lovejoy!

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Marge Simpson: Wife, Mother, Crumper
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Who knew Marge could crump?

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Heilmann's "Two-Lane Blacktop" (2008)
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Mary Heilmann in the studio, completing the work "Two-Lane Blacktop" (2008). The title for the work was inspired by the 1971 cult film "Two-Lane Blacktop" starring musician James Taylor driving a 55 Chevy cross-country.

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Exclusive Episode #079: In her Long Island studio, Mary Heilmann discusses two inspirations for her work: tea bowls that adhere to the Japanese aesthetic philosophy of "Wabi-sabi" and the cartoon color pallette used in "The Simpsons" television show. Heilmann contrasts her working method with that of the Abtract Expressionists, preferring to find "the easiest way to do it" which often involves thinking through the compositions and colors with a computer. The video features ceramics and paintings installed as part of the artist's traveling retrospective "To Be Someone" at the New Museum and the Wexner Center for the Arts.

For every piece of Mary Heilmann's work—abstract paintings, ceramics, and furniture—there is a backstory. Imbued with recollections, stories spun from her imagination, and references to music, aesthetic influences, and dreams, her paintings are like meditations or icons. Her compositions are often hybrid spatial environments that juxtapose two- and three-dimensional renderings in a single frame, join several canvases into new works, or create diptychs of paintings and photographs in the form of prints, slideshows, and videos. Heilmann sometimes installs her paintings alongside chairs and benches that she builds by hand, an open invitation for viewers to socialize and contemplate her work communally.

Learn more about Mary Heilmann: http://www.art21.org/artists/mary-heilmann

VIDEO | Producer: Wesley Miller & Nick Ravich. Interview: Susan Sollins. Camera: Mark Falstad & Joel Shapiro. Sound: Roger Phenix. Editor: Paulo Padilha & Mark Sutton. Artwork Courtesy: Mary Heilmann. Special Thanks: Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, & The New Museum, New York.

i looove this woman.
grrreat laugh.
cute teeth.

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