Table of Contents

Biography
Works
Public collections
Selected exhibitions
Selected Sources
References
External links

Marjorie Strider

NameMarjorie Strider
Image
CaptionMarjorie Strider, is seated, in front of her work, Girl with Radish (1963), in a black-and-white photograph by Fred W. McDarrah. Her subject is polychrome painted on a flat surface, with three-dimensional eyelashes and lips, and a spherical radish in her mouth.
Birth NameMarjorie Virginia Strider
Birth Date1931-1-26
Birth PlaceGuthrie, Oklahoma
NationalityAmerican
EducationKansas City Art Institute, Oklahoma State University
FieldPainting, Sculpture, Performance art
MovementPop Art, avant-garde
SpouseMichael Kirby
(1960 – 1969)

Marjorie Virginia Strider (January 26, 1931 – August 27, 2014) was an American painter, sculptor, and performance artist best known for her three-dimensional paintings and site-specific soft sculpture installations.

Biography

Born in 1931 in Guthrie, Oklahoma, Strider studied art at the Kansas City Art Institute before moving to New York City in the early 1960s. Strider's three-dimensional paintings of beach girls with "built out" curves were prominently featured in the Pace Gallery's 1964 "International Girlie Show" alongside other "pin-up"-inspired pop art by Rosalyn Drexler (the only other female), Roy Lichtenstein, Andy Warhol, Ben Johnson, and Tom Wesselmann. Her comically pornographic Girl with Radish was made into the banner image for the show, one of the first successful exhibitions of the then-new gallery. Her bold figural work from this era aimed to subvert sexist images of women in popular culture by turning objectified female bodies into menacing forms that literally got "in your face." Strider had two subsequent solo exhibitions at the Pace Gallery in 1965 and 1966 where she continued to show her voluminous paintings of bikini-clad girls as well as 3-D renderings of vegetables, fruits, flowers, clouds and other natural phenomena.

Strider became a core member of the 1960s avant-garde. She performed in happenings organized by Allan Kaprow, Claes Oldenburg and others. In 1969 she organized with Hannah Weiner and John Perreault the first Street Work (a wordplay on earthwork), an informal public art event. Twenty artists participated including Vito Acconci, Gregory Battcock and Arakawa. Strider's contribution was thirty empty picture frames which she hung in random locations in Midtown Manhattan in the hopes of getting pedestrians to look at their environment differently. Strider married Michael Kirby, a contemporary artist and writer, who published Michael Kirby: Happenings; Jim Dine, Red Grooms, Allan Kaprow, Claes Oldenburg, Robert Whitman; An Illustrated Anthology written and edited by Michael Kirby (New York: E. P. Dutton & Co., Inc.), in 1965. and later became a professor of theater and performance at New York University.

On the 23rd and 24th of March, 1971, Marjorie Strider presented Cherry Smash at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York.

Around this time, for Claes Oldenburg's birthday, Strider made chocolate casts of Patty Mucha Oldenburg's breasts (a plaster version was later acquired by Sol LeWitt). Perhaps it was her intimate friendship with the Oldenburgs that led Strider to redirect her artistic focus from hard sculptural paintings to soft sculpture in the 1970s. She made site-specific installations of unbridled polyurethane foam that tumbled out of windows (Building Work 1976, PS1) or oozed down a spiral staircase (Blue Sky 1976, Clocktower Gallery). At times her renegade pours incorporated domestic objects (brooms, groceries, teapots), while others remained totally amorphous. These works are similar in style and intent to Lynda Benglis' floor paintings and soft sculptures of the same era.

From 1982 to 1985, a retrospective of her work toured museums and universities across the United States. Venues included: SculptureCenter, New York; Gibbes Museum of Art, Charleston, South Carolina; Joslyn Art Museum, Omaha, Nebraska; Museum of Art, University of Arizona, Tucson; and the McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, Texas. In the 1990s, she began to make paintings with tactile surfaces that were more Abstract Expressionist than Pop. In 2009 she revisited her original girlie theme, painting new examples which she exhibited at the Bridge Gallery, New York.

Marjorie Strider died at her home in Saugerties, New York, on August 27, 2014.

Works


Public collections


Selected exhibitions


Selected Sources


References


External links


Category:1934 births
Category:2014 deaths
Category:Sculptors from Oklahoma
Category:American pop artists
Category:American women sculptors
Category:American women performance artists
Category:American performance artists
Category:People from Guthrie, Oklahoma
Category:People from Saugerties, New York
Category:Pop art
Category:20th-century American women painters
Category:20th-century American painters
Category:21st-century American women