Woodmere to feature work by Quita Brodhead

Posted 2/6/14

With a career spanning more than eight decades, Philadelphia abstract painter Quita Brodhead (1901-2002) was known for her vibrant style and signature bright-color palette. Woodmere Art Museum’s …

This item is available in full to subscribers.

Please log in to continue

Log in

Woodmere to feature work by Quita Brodhead

Posted

With a career spanning more than eight decades, Philadelphia abstract painter Quita Brodhead (1901-2002) was known for her vibrant style and signature bright-color palette. Woodmere Art Museum’s new exhibition, “Quita Brodhead: Bold Strokes,” showcases the evolution of the artist’s oeuvre from early figurative work into bold, gestural abstraction.

An accompanying show, “Women and Biography,” shares the personal and public expression of intimate relationships between female artists and their families, partners, children and peers. Both exhibitions are on view Feb. 8 to June 1 (open house, Monday, Feb. 17, from 1-4 p.m., Woodmere Art Museum, 9201 Germantown Ave.).

As a sign of Brodhead’s far-reaching influence, this year’s PHS Philadelphia Flower Show (March 1-9, Pennsylvania Convention Center) has selected Woodmere as one of its 18 national museum partners; with this year’s “ARTiculture!” theme in mind, Flower Show landscapers will create a display inspired by the Museum’s Brodhead collection. This unprecedented collaboration of Flower Show designers and the nation’s great art museums will turn the Convention Center into a 10-acre living canvas of exquisite landscapes, gardens and floral arrangements. For more information or to purchase tickets, visit theflowershow.com.

After attending the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (PAFA) in the early 1920s, Brodhead became a devoted student of Philadelphia artist Arthur B. Carles, her work exemplifying his belief in the expressive qualities of color. In 1934, she had her first solo exhibition at the Bryn Mawr Art Center (now the Main Line Art Center) in Haverford. By the 1940s and 1950s, Brodhead had developed large-scale, abstract paintings that put her at the cutting-edge of artistic expression in the United States and Europe. Among her influences were Joan Miró, Wassily Kandinsky, Pablo Picasso and Henri Matisse.

Despite her success abroad and her innovative style of abstraction, Brodhead’s career gained significant momentum in the U.S. only when she was in her 90s. “Bold Strokes,” composed of 56 paintings from every decade of the artist’s 80-year career, begins with “Red-Haired Lady” (c. 1922–25), a painting Brodhead completed while she was a student at PAFA, and concludes with “Whence and Where To” (2000), a peaceful and delicately hued abstract composition that suggests a peaceful contemplation of the artist’s past and future.

“Woodmere is incredibly thrilled to present the work of Quita Brodhead,” said William R. Valerio, the Patricia Van Burgh Allison Director and CEO of Woodmere. “Brodhead exhibited in Europe and New York with artists such as Hans Arp and Wassily Kandinsky, but she is not well-known in Philadelphia.

“At the center of the exhibition are her large, colorful abstract paintings. Situating her work within the development of abstraction that occurred in Philadelphia and internationally in the 1940s and 1950s, it becomes clear that Brodhead was at the center of major artistic trends of the mid-20th century.”

In Woodmere’s adjacent galleries, the exhibition “Women and Biography” showcases the strength of the Museum’s collection of work by female Philadelphia artists, including Mary Cassatt, Helen Corson, Edith Emerson, Martha Erlebacher, Elizabeth Shippen Green, Betty Hubbard, Aubrey Levinthal, Mitzi Melnicoff, Catherine Mulligan, Edith Neff, Violet Oakley, Alice Kent Stoddard and more.

Woodmere Art Museum is located at 9201 Germantown Ave. Admission to special exhibitions is $10 for adults, $7 for seniors, and free for students, children and museum members; exhibitions in the Founder’s Gallery and Helen Millard Children’s Gallery are free. (Woodmere offers free admission on Sundays, including all special exhibitions.) Museum hours are: Tuesday through Thursday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Friday, 10 a.m. to 8:45 p.m.; Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m., and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. For more information, visit woodmereartmuseum.org or call 215-247-0476.

news