Iconoclastic Fervor: Sally Hazelet Drummond's Road to Abstraction

About The Book

Sally Hazelet Drummond is believed to be the first female graduate of the Hite Art Institute with a masters in painting in 1952. It was during her study at the University of Louisville that she further explored Abstract Expressionism a style that started only a decade earlier in the 1940s. In 1953 Drummond a second-generation abstract expressionist joined the epicenter of the movement as a member of the Tanager Gallery one of the leading Tenth Street artists co-ops. In the midst of figures such as De Kooning Reinhardt and Rothko Drummond refined her style into the ­­­­dotted starburst patterns that she continued to develop over the course of her life.While Drummond has been described in several genres ranging from neo-pointillism to op-art her work and the exhibition itself is firmly rooted in abstract expressionism. Drummond herself described the movement as a kind of iconoclastic fervor. While history has remembered Abstract Expressionism as being a definitive style characterized largely by wall sized canvases swabbed with gestural marks of the artists contemporary writers provide a much larger perspective that typifies the avant-gardism of the movement.Drummonds artistic career from her Tanager days to date has been a deepening study into her understanding of abstract expressionist practice. However as the oeuvre of her work has demonstrated her explorations into abstraction proffer a different albeit not unfounded view of the art movement. Drummonds views on spirituality and community serve as a foil to much of the machismo and individualist psychology of the abstract expressionist artists. Additionally Drummonds use of easel scale unrestrained use of color and deliberate art making process offer a reframing of the accepted tenants of abstract expressionism. Drummonds art and her journey into abstraction is also deserving of the self-same description an iconoclastic fervor.The exhibition of her art ranging from the 1940s until 2010 is on display in Gallery X at the Schneider Hall Galleries from November 19th until December 18th 2015. An accompanying catalogue Iconoclastic Fervor: Sally Hazelet Drummonds Road to Abstraction is also available for purchase from John Clark at Old Stone Press at (502) 693-1506 john@oldstonepress.com
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