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Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Modern Africa #2, 2016–17 Oil on canvas, in artist’s frame, 74 × 101 × 3 inches (188 × 256.5 × 7.6 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Modern Africa #2, 2016–17

Oil on canvas, in artist’s frame, 74 × 101 × 3 inches (188 × 256.5 × 7.6 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Ozarkia, 2014 Oil on canvas, in artist’s frame, 28 × 64 × 3 ⅜ inches (71.1 × 162.6 × 8.6 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Ozarkia, 2014

Oil on canvas, in artist’s frame, 28 × 64 × 3 ⅜ inches (71.1 × 162.6 × 8.6 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America Acidified, 2013 Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 34 × 115 ⅜ × 5 inches (86.4 × 293.1 × 12.7 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America Acidified, 2013

Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 34 × 115 ⅜ × 5 inches (86.4 × 293.1 × 12.7 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Morning, 2012 Acrylic on canvas, in artist’s frame, 18 × 32 inches (45.7 × 81.3 cm)© Neil Jenney. Photo: Rob McKeever

Neil Jenney, Morning, 2012

Acrylic on canvas, in artist’s frame, 18 × 32 inches (45.7 × 81.3 cm)
© Neil Jenney. Photo: Rob McKeever

Neil Jenney, North America Depicted, 2009–10 Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 40 ¼ × 45 ¼ × 2 ⅛ inches (102.2 × 114.9 × 5.4 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America Depicted, 2009–10

Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 40 ¼ × 45 ¼ × 2 ⅛ inches (102.2 × 114.9 × 5.4 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 2001–06 Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 26 ¼ × 28 ¼ × 2 ¾ inches (66.7 × 71.8 × 7 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 2001–06

Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 26 ¼ × 28 ¼ × 2 ¾ inches (66.7 × 71.8 × 7 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, IDEALISM IS UNAVOIDABLE, 2000 Silkscreen on canvas, 16 × 20 inches (40.6 × 50.8 cm), edition of 18© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, IDEALISM IS UNAVOIDABLE, 2000

Silkscreen on canvas, 16 × 20 inches (40.6 × 50.8 cm), edition of 18
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 1992–99 Acrylic on panel, in artist’s frame, 39 ¼ × 152 ½ × 3 ¾ inches (99.7 × 387.4 × 9.5 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 1992–99

Acrylic on panel, in artist’s frame, 39 ¼ × 152 ½ × 3 ¾ inches (99.7 × 387.4 × 9.5 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Venus From North America, 1979–86 Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 85 × 53 ¼ × 2 ¾ inches (215.9 × 135.3 × 7 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Venus From North America, 1979–86

Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 85 × 53 ¼ × 2 ¾ inches (215.9 × 135.3 × 7 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Rejected Mets Uniform by Neil Jenney, 1985 Ink on paper, in 2 parts, each: 10 ¾ × 8 ¼ inches (27.3 × 21 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Rejected Mets Uniform by Neil Jenney, 1985

Ink on paper, in 2 parts, each: 10 ¾ × 8 ¼ inches (27.3 × 21 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Study for Acidify, 1982 Grease stick on acetate, 31 ¼ × 102 ¼ inches (79.4 × 259.7 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Study for Acidify, 1982

Grease stick on acetate, 31 ¼ × 102 ¼ inches (79.4 × 259.7 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America, 1978­–90 Acrylic on panel, in artist’s frame, 25 × 113 inches (63.5 × 287 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, North America, 1978­–90

Acrylic on panel, in artist’s frame, 25 × 113 inches (63.5 × 287 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, The Modern Era, 1971–72 Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 35 ¾ × 30 ⅞ × 5 ¾ inches (90.8 × 78.4 × 14.6 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, The Modern Era, 1971–72

Oil on wood, in artist’s frame, 35 ¾ × 30 ⅞ × 5 ¾ inches (90.8 × 78.4 × 14.6 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Trash and Trashcan, 1970 Acrylic on canvas, in artist’s frame, 58 ½ × 55 ⅝ inches (148.6 × 141.3 cm), Museum of Modern Art, New York© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Trash and Trashcan, 1970

Acrylic on canvas, in artist’s frame, 58 ½ × 55 ⅝ inches (148.6 × 141.3 cm), Museum of Modern Art, New York
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Accident and Witnesses, 1969 Acrylic on canvas, in artist’s frame, 58 ⅛ × 74 ¼ × 4 inches (147.6 × 188.6 × 10.2 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Accident and Witnesses, 1969

Acrylic on canvas, in artist’s frame, 58 ⅛ × 74 ¼ × 4 inches (147.6 × 188.6 × 10.2 cm)
© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Linear Piece, 1967 Aluminum, 65 × 35 × 6 ½ inches (165.1 × 88.9 × 16.5 cm)© Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Linear Piece, 1967

Aluminum, 65 × 35 × 6 ½ inches (165.1 × 88.9 × 16.5 cm)
© Neil Jenney

About

Regarding the change from Bad Painting to Good Painting. I had two striking realizations: 1, that even if I produced the worst paintings possible (Bad Painting), they would not be good enough. And 2, that “Idealism is unavoidable.” And that, finally, Bad Painting wasn’t my ultimate ideal.
—Neil Jenney

A maverick of twentieth-century American art, Neil Jenney pursues realism as a style and philosophy. He strives to return to the classical ideal of truth and to integrate form and content, while eschewing what he has described as the decorative, expressive qualities of modern abstraction.

In his two years at Massachusetts College of Art, Boston, from 1964 to 1966, Jenney created hard-edge paintings and Minimalist sculpture, showing an advanced understanding of contemporary art. Yet when he was ready, his work was rejected by all Boston galleries. This disappointment forced Jenney to realize that selling art was not a financial solution in Boston, and that he couldn’t afford being a student. As the few part-time jobs were already taken, gone was the notion of working his way through school.

On November 6, 1966, Jenney turned twenty-one and started driving a checker cab for Town Taxi, which he would do full-time for sixty-three days straight. On or about January 7, 1967, he moved to 723 East 6th Street, New York, and began his Anti-Minimal Sculpture, initially with an Electric Light Piece that drained his funds and was never completed. Parts were used for the last Light Piece, of 1967, which was acquired by Kasper Koenig. Next came the Linear Series: groups of half-inch aluminum bars, coated with a flexible multicolored paint and arranged on the floor. These pieces featured a new Anti-Minimal element: the random crooked line.

Jenney next restated the concept with The Volumetric Series: irregularly shaped masses of fabric, formed over chicken wire and arranged in groups of three or four on the floor. Jenney’s dealer, Richard Bellamy, sold the best Volumetric to Robert Scull in the spring of 1967, in Jenney’s first New York sale, for $300.

Next came the Found (free) Material Series, large floor arrangements critically referred to as “environmental,” “theatrical,” or “maximal.” However, as critics were beginning to identify Jenney as an “earth” or “environmental” artist, he was growing discouraged with the lack of sales, despite some nice comments made. One day Bellamy said, “Well, ya know, Jenney, nobody’s got floor space—everybody’s got wall space.” So Jenney put some Linear Pieces on the wall and made some sales! Bellamy was right. Jenney needed wall ideas.

Now the format of the “environmental” Found Material Pieces of 1968 gradually mutated to a simple structure of “these things and those things relating”: tanks of circulating water and plants (1968), shown at Noah Goldowsky/Richard Bellamy Gallery, New York, spring of 1968; a desk and office chair with lighted neon on top (1968), shown in West Germany at Galerie Rudolf Zwirner, November 1968; soapy water in hanging vinyl containers and washed wood (1968), shown at Galerie Rudolf Zwirner, November 1968; two corrugated aluminum structures with three fluorescent lights (1968), shown at David Whitney Gallery, New York, November 1970.

Jenney’s life was looking in dumpsters every day, as he couldn’t afford materials. Often he couldn’t find what he was looking for, and often the good stuff was under a pile of other stuff and couldn’t be retrieved. This made art making slow and frustrating.

At some point Jenney mused that if he was doing paintings he could just paint whatever he needed, and that the paintings would be on the wall, where the money was. And that “things relating to other things, not just spatially, but through their identity as objects” (the structural format of the sculptures) could be stated in painting form. And that this brand of realism was very removed from the Pop art, straight American symbolism solution of the day.

Jenney reckoned that Pop art was “veneration of the superficial”—Campbell’s Soup, movie stars, pickup trucks, storefronts, American stuff.

Jenney felt that the world was ready for veneration of the relevant, the pertinent, the profound, the timely. No one was dealing with these elements; they were just laying there, like electricity was in 1840.

So it was now painting. Jenney decided to deliver the message as directly as possible, drawing and painting once only, using acrylic paint. This brand of new realism began in 1969 and finished in 1970.

These works featured relating elements isolated on large areas of canvas, painted green (grass), blue (sky/water), or brown (dirt or tabletop). The work developed in three stages. The first paintings were made as part of the last “environmental” sculpture, and were shown in 1969 at the new Whitney Museum in a show called Anti-Illusion: two series of paintings with images in cinematic progression on the wall, plus dog food in food bowls on newspapers on the floor. Jenney quickly realized that a single-image statement was the most practical. Stage two: these first single-image works started with quick drawing and fast painting. The results were rather sloppy—but the message was clear.

FOREST AND LUMBER, ACCIDENT AND ARGUMENT

At some point Bellamy—who preferred Jenney’s sculpture—said, “Well, clean it up a little.” The result: good drawing and fast painting and more versions of each image.

THEM AND US (MoMA), MAN AND CHALLENGE  (The Met)

In 1969 Marcia Tucker, the new curator at the new Whitney Museum, visited Jenney’s studio at 76 Jefferson Street, New York, and decided to include this new realism in the Whitney Annual of 1969.

FISH AND POLE sold for $900 to novelist Constance DeJong (unframed) and received no critical comment.

By 1978 Marcia Tucker had her own museum, the New Museum. Having done much traveling to studios in America, Marcia was aware of other active, independent, idiosyncratic realists and decided to gather them together, Jenney included, under the rubric Bad Painting.

Gradually—toward the end of 1970—Jenney realized that his completed “ideal” would be Good Drawing and Slow Painting. This would allow total refinement. This meant dealing with the complexities of oil pigment, of which Jenney knew nothing. But Jenney did know that acrylics were very limited in terms of chromatic subtlety, and their fast drying time was limiting.

So, in December 1970 Jenney decided to tackle the oil pigment puzzle. And to move past the “this and that” format of the Bad years, and to work on wood, which would allow for greater precision. This led Jenney first to the library, to seek books with technical answers and the secrets of the ancients. Here he learned of the Greek notion that a painting was a scene viewed through a window, hence the window (the frame) presented the illusion and existed as the architectural foreground. So frames were functional.

Jenney had avoided framing the Bad Paintings of 1969–70, thinking that frames were merely decoration, and figured that prettifying Bad Painting would diminish its purity. Wrong paintings require a frame, and it’s a perfect place for the title.

This revelation was the most sustaining inspiration that Jenney ever had, as suddenly he was back in the sculpture business again, where he felt most comfortable. Since 1971 Jenney has not stopped drawing frames. He started with the Bad Painting solution, and since that date has developed nine distinct framing solutions, some featuring innovations like the seamless face with the lighted surface treatment; some with a mantled base, or big lintel, or wide side face, or most recently the narrow/wide face; some using side-mounted titles, others using the marquee-style (angled) side titles.

Jenney designated all works from 1971 on—all on wooden surfaces—as Good Painting. These works focused on the “intimate,” rather than the “panoramic.” And Jenney now refers to the early new realism of the 1960s as Bad Painting, thanks to Marcia Tucker.

At some point the oil-on-wood works—with the frames—became rather heavy, too difficult to move without assistance. This annoyed Jenney, as he preferred to do things himself. Jenney’s assistant Romeo (Joe) DeTullio (frame maker) passed on in 2004, age eighty-nine years. One day Jenney mused—after some thirty years—that he had never painted on canvas with oils, and that work on canvas would be much lighter. And that even bigger works could be moved by himself alone. The first of these works came from old drawings for paintings never done. Jenney refers to these new works (2016) as the New Good Paintings, as they have a different process entirely.

This is the current position of Jenney’s aesthetic affairs.

Fairs, Events & Announcements

Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 1992–99 © Neil Jenney

In Conversation

Neil Jenney
Linda Yablonsky

Thursday, March 21, 2024, 6:30–8pm
New York Academy of Art
nyaa.edu

Join the New York Academy of Art for a conversation between Neil Jenney and author and critic Linda Yablonsky. The pair will discuss how the artist has challenged models of taste and subject matter in the three key phases of his career—Bad Paintings (1969–70), Good Paintings (1971–2015), and New Good Paintings (2015–)—as well as his commitment to exploring, and ultimately transcending, realism as both style and philosophy. Jenney will be honored at the Tribeca Ball 2024 on April 1.

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Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 1992–99 © Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney with a portrait of himself by Joseph McNamara at Gagosian, 980 Madison Avenue, New York, 2013. Artwork © Joseph McNamara. Photo: Robert Wright/The New York Times/Redux

Honor

Neil Jenney
Tribeca Ball 2024

Neil Jenney is the honoree of the Tribeca Ball 2024, taking place on April 1 in New York. During the annual gala, the five floors of the New York Academy of Art are open for guests to explore while students offer a firsthand look at their creative processes. Proceeds from the event support the nonprofit school, which was founded by artists in 1982, and its mission to empower a new generation of artists, and will be used to establish the Neil Jenney Artist Scholarship Fund.

Neil Jenney with a portrait of himself by Joseph McNamara at Gagosian, 980 Madison Avenue, New York, 2013. Artwork © Joseph McNamara. Photo: Robert Wright/The New York Times/Redux

Helen Frankenthaler, Orange Underline, 1963 © 2020 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

Art Fair

Basel Online 2020

In our most significant online sales presentation to date, Gagosian unveils important works by modern and contemporary masters through two separate online platforms—Gagosian Online and Art Basel Online. These individually curated selections offer collectors direct access to artworks of the highest caliber. To experience the presentation in its entirety, viewers will need to visit both gagosian.com and artbasel.com. The works on gagosian.com will rotate every forty-eight hours, for a total of five cycles.

Helen Frankenthaler, Orange Underline, 1963 © 2020 Helen Frankenthaler Foundation, Inc./Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

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Museum Exhibitions

Neil Jenney, Modern Africa #1, 2015–16 © Neil Jenney. Photo: Rob McKeever

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Framing Nature’s Paradox
Neil Jenney & Donald Sultan, 1969–2023

October 6, 2023–February 18, 2024
Morris Museum, Morristown, New Jersey
morrismuseum.org

This exhibition brings together works by Neil Jenney and Donald Sultan that depict the natural world and human experience through unconventional materials and visual languages. Ten of Jenney’s paintings, including works from his Bad Paintings series (1969–70), each in an artist-built painted wood frame, are shown alongside ten of Sultan’s sizable depictions of natural elements, which are made using construction materials.

Neil Jenney, Modern Africa #1, 2015–16 © Neil Jenney. Photo: Rob McKeever

Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 2001–06 © Neil Jenney

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Neil Jenney in
American Realism Today

September 16, 2022–January 1, 2023
New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut
nbmaa.org

American Realism Today, curated by Neil Jenney, celebrates the rich tradition of realist art in America while reflecting the innovative spirit of our contemporary times. Capturing landscapes and scenes of everyday life, the exhibition includes more than fifty paintings, sculptures, and works on paper by twenty-one artists working across generations. Work by Jenney is included.

Neil Jenney, North America Divided, 2001–06 © Neil Jenney

Neil Jenney, Modern Africa, 2016 © Neil Jenney

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Neil Jenney
American Realist

November 2, 2018–March 17, 2019
New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut
www.nbmaa.org

This extensive exhibition highlights nearly five decades of Neil Jenney’s work. The show, which traces the evolution of Jenney’s career and explores persistent themes in his work, features more than twenty paintings dating from 1969 to 2016. Among the works on view are examples from Jenney’s 1969–70 series Bad Paintings—purposefully rough, gestural figurative images rendered in acrylic paint on canvas.

Neil Jenney, Modern Africa, 2016 © Neil Jenney

Richard Artschwager, Cerise, 2002 © 2015 Richard Artschwager/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

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Literary Devices

October 11, 2014–March 15, 2015
Fisher Landau Center for Art, New York
flcart.org

Literary Devices, which comprises works representing text, literary themes, and books themselves, explores the tension between language and image. The exhibition features works by over forty artists, including Richard Artschwager, Gregory Crewdson, Neil Jenney, Donald Judd, Mike Kelley, Anselm Kiefer, Richard Prince, Ed Ruscha, Mark Tansey, and Cy Twombly.

Richard Artschwager, Cerise, 2002 © 2015 Richard Artschwager/Artists Rights Society (ARS), New York

See all Museum Exhibitions for Neil Jenney