Major exhibition of Janet Fish's early work opens at DC Moore Gallery in New York

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Major exhibition of Janet Fish's early work opens at DC Moore Gallery in New York
Stuffed Peppers, 1970. Oil on canvas, 59 x 57 in.



NEW YORK, NY.- DC Moore Gallery presents Janet Fish: Glass & Plastic, The Early Years, 1968-1978. Drawn primarily from private collections, this major exhibition of Fish’s early work underscores her foundational engagement with just two materials: glass and plastic. The catalogue accompanying the exhibition features excerpts from Fish’s 1988 oral history interview for the Archives of American Art. The previously unpublished text illuminates her aims and concerns as a young painter.

Janet Fish has revitalized the traditional genre of still life with an expansive body of work that revels in the formal and conceptual possibilities of surprising combinations of objects seen in changing lights. Her innovative career began in the 1960s and 1970s, when she set herself the challenge of capturing the interactions of light with glass and plastic. The resulting large-scale paintings explore color, composition, and mark making through the representation of surfaces at once reflective and transparent, material and immaterial, mundane and magical. Fish’s unique approach to still life, or nature morte, rethinks these very terms. She explains, “It’s really as much painting life as anything else …. because it’s not dead. Things aren’t dead. The light is through everything and energy through everything.”

After graduating from Yale University with an MFA in 1963, Fish moved to New York City, where her painting progressed in dialogue with that of her Pop Art, Minimalist, and “New Realist” contemporaries while remaining resolutely fixed on her immediate surroundings. In the late 1960s, she painted a series of fruit tightly packaged in shiny cellophane. In works like Majorska Vodka (1971) and Three Honey Jars (1975), Fish created patterns of light and color out of the contents and lettered labels of oversized bottles and jars. She then began focusing on increasingly complex permutations of overlapping glassware. The work of the mid 1970s, such as Afternoon Reflections, June and September (1978), incorporates references to specific seasons and settings, pointing toward Fish’s later landscapes and vibrant still lifes.

Born in Boston in 1938, Janet Fish grew up in Bermuda and now lives in New York and Vermont. Her paintings are included in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago; Dallas Museum of Art; Detroit Institute of Arts; Metropolitan Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Whitney Museum of American Art, among many others










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