Beth Lipman American, b. 1971
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Beth LipmanStill Life with Scale and Gazing Ball, 2020glass, wood, metal, paint, adhesive64 x 42 x 32 inches
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Beth LipmanSphenophyllum and Chains, 2019glass, wood54 x 50 x 38 inches
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Beth LipmanDistill #10, 2015cast iron, enamel, chrome plating11 x 5 x 9 inches
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Beth LipmanDistill #14, 2015cast iron, brass plating, rust patina12 x 8 x 2 inches
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Beth LipmanDistill #21, 2015cast iron, chrome plating, rust patina10 x 11 x 6 inches
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Beth LipmanChalice and Detritus, Lake Clark, AK, 2014lambda print on Plexiglas58 x 34.5 inchesedition of 3
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Beth LipmanChalice and Tanalian Mountain (II), 2014c-print mounted to aluminum with gloss laminate48 x 66 inchesedition of 3
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Beth LipmanGlass Wallpaper Installation, 2011hand cut, kiln formed glassvariable
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Beth LipmanSticks, Pitcher and Chain, 2011transfer print on plexi27.25 x 34 inchesedition of 8
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Beth LipmanStill Life with Bowl of Fruit and Chain, 2011transfer print on plexi29 x 37 inchesedition of 8
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Beth LipmanCandlesticks, 2010transfer print on plexi30 x 58 inchesedition of 8
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Beth LipmanPocket Watch, Books, Skull and Candles, 2010transfer print on plexi62 x 54 inchesedition of 8
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Beth LipmanWhatnot I, 2010glass, wood, paint, adhesive84 x 42 x 30 inches
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Beth LipmanBread, Chalices, Bottles and Flowers, 2008transfer print on plexi43 x 69 inchesedition of 3
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Beth LipmanFruit with Footed Bowl, 2007transfer print28 x 22 inchesedition of 3
Beth Lipman is an artist who is best known for her monumental still-life compositions. She has translated some of her work into large photographs which reference the work of Dutch and European still life painters.
Lipman has exhibited her work extensively nationally and internationally, including the Museum of Glass, Tacoma, Washington; the Renwick Gallery of the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, DC; and the RISD Museum where her exhibition After You're Gone received tremendous critical acclaim, for its innovative use of material, volume and presence, and thought-provoking ideas about abundance and saturation together with the history of American decorative arts. Recent works include Secretary with Chipmunk, a multipurpose sculpture for the Chipstone Foundation, WI and One Portrait of One Man, a response to Marsden Hartley for the Weisman Art Museum, MN.
Beth Lipman is the recipient of the prestigious United States Artists Berman Bloch Fellowship, a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant and a Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Grant. Her work is in the collections of the North Carolina Museum of Art; Brooklyn Museum of Art, NY; Kemper Museum for Contemporary Art, MO; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washingtion, DC; the Jewish Museum, NY; the Norton Museum of Art, FL; and the Corning Museum of Glass, NY among many others.
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Beth Lipman: Collective Elegy
Video Interview at the Museum of Arts and Design, New York City December 22, 2020We are pleased to announce a comprehensive exhibition of Beth Lipman's work which is now open at the Museum of Arts and Desgin (MAD), New...Read more -
Beth Lipman: Precarious Possessions
Ringling Museum of Art, Sarasota, FL July 28, 2014'The still life has long been used in painting as a visual metaphor for considerations of materiality, the conspicuous consumption of wealth, and the fleeting...Read more
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Cade Tompkins Projects celebrates the opening of the David H. Koch Center for Cancer Care
artdaily.com, artdaily.com, August 31, 2020 -
Pushing the Limits of Glass at Cade Tompkins Projects
Bill Van Siclen, The Providence Journal, December 15, 2011 -
Beth Lipman at Cade Tompkins Projects
Greg Cooke, The Phoenix, November 29, 2011 -
Ten objects that will amaze you
Michael O’Sullivan, The Washington Post, August 5, 2011 -
Beth Lipman and Ingalena Klenell
Museum of Glass, October 23, 2010 -
Going for Broke: Beth Lipman
Alix Browne, T Magazine, The New York Times, September 25, 2008