Calvert Coggeshall

Calvert Coggeshall
Born 1907
Whitesboro, NY
Died 1 February 1990(1990-02-01) (aged 83)
Newcastle, ME
Nationality American
Known for Painter, Designer
Movement abstraction, early modernist-leaning landscape

Calvert Coggeshall is an abstract painter and a designer.

Biography

Calvert Coggeshall, an abstract painter and a designer. His last New York exhibition was sponsored by the Rothko Foundation in 1987 at Artists Space, a nonprofit gallery on West Broadway. The paintings he showed were glowing, monochromatic canvases that echoed the colors of Maine skies, trees and earth.

From the early 1950s, Mr. Coggeshall exhibited regularly with the avant-garde Betty Parsons Gallery and later with its successor, the Jack Tilton Gallery. In 1978 a retrospective of his work was mounted by the Bowdoin College Museum of Art in Maine.

His last New York exhibition was sponsored by the Rothko Foundation in 1987 at Artists Space, a nonprofit gallery on West Broadway. The paintings he showed were glowing, monochromatic canvases that echoed the colors of Maine skies, trees and earth.

From the early 1950s, Mr. Coggeshall exhibited regularly with the avant-garde Betty Parsons Gallery and later with its successor, the Jack Tilton Gallery. In 1978 a retrospective of his work was mounted by the Bowdoin College Museum of Art in Maine.[1]

Selected exhibitions

Pittsburgh Plan for Art, Pittsburgh, PA. University of Colorado, Boulder, CO

Whitney Museum of American Art Painters Annual, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY

41st Annual Exhibition of Contemporary American Paintings, The Toledo Museum of Art, Toledo, OH, June- August (exhibition brochure) Group Exhibition, Dorothy G. Hales Gallery, New York, NY, October

Annual Exhibition of Contemporary Painting in the United States, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA, August

Exhibition of Paintings: Mrs. D. Percy Morgan Jr., George L. K. Morris, Calvert Coggeshall of New York, and Alexander Calder of Paris, Berkshire Museum, Pittsfield, August 12–25

References

External links

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