
In the catalogue essay for the exhibition, Linda Nochlin formulates New Realism as characterized by largeness of scale, a field like flatness, a concern with measurement, and the use of photographic techniques such as cropping, close-ups and disjunction of scale. Her 1967 work, The James Bond Car Painting was included in the group exhibition, Realism Now, at Vassar College Art Gallery in 1968, marking her first recognition as part of the New Realist movement. As Lilly Wei writes in the exhibition catalogue, these works assert the beauty of the mundane, “scrutinizing commonplace objects and spaces usually not accorded a starring role in paintings.” Jacquette, and other women artists at this time, “believed that domestic objects could be the subject of art, could become art, beliefs supported by feminist theories that would eventually upend the existing paternalistic canon.” In the early 1960s, Jacquette began painting her immediate reality from unusual points of view: looking through the windows of the flower district near her apartment on West 29th Street, down at her son’s toys on the floor, or up at the light reflected on the tin ceiling while practicing yoga. Rarely seen together, these early works exemplify Jacquette’s consistent intensity of gaze and unique vantage point expressed throughout her career.
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Looking Up/Down/Inside/Out features the artist’s paintings and works on paper from 1962-1976. The long-planned exhibitions, organized in collaboration with Yvonne Jacquette and her son Tom Burckhardt, will open as scheduled at DC Moore Gallery on May 4, 2023, with the support of her family as a tribute to her life and work.

DC Moore Gallery is honored to present two concurrent exhibitions, Yvonne Jacquette: Looking Up/Down/Inside/Out and Yvonne Jacquette: Recent Views, Maine & New York, following the recent passing of Yvonne Jacquette on April 23, 2023.
