Frank Holliday

Frank Holliday

Frank Holliday at the Painting Center in New York City
Born 1957 (1957)
Greensboro, North Carolina
Nationality American
Education School of Visual Arts, New York City
Known for Painting, Performance
Movement Neo-expressionism, Neo-Abstraction, East Village
Awards Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Grant, Pollock-Krasner Grant, Guggenheim Fellowship
Frank Holliday, "Dayafter", oil on canvas, 96" x 96 ", 2001

Frank Holliday (born 1957, North Carolina) is a painter who became known in the New York City art world in the 1970s and 1980s and is often associated with the East Village scene and associated with Club 57. His early career as an artist included working with Andy Warhol and close associations with artists such as Keith Haring[1] Ann Magnuson, Kenny Scharf, et al.

Frank Holliday exhibited with galleries such as Kenny Schacter Gallery, Tony Shafrazi Gallery and has had several solo shows at Debs & Co. and Tom Cugliani Gallery as well as The Kitchen, Dru Artstark and GAL Gallery. He’s been represented in numerous group shows including shows at The Arts Club, White Columns, Sandra Gering Gallery, Amy Lipton Gallery, Barbara Toll Fine Art and Club 57 with Keith Haring, all in NYC. His work has been the subject of reviews by Holland Cotter and Stephen Westfall in Art in America, Grace Glueck and Ken Johnson in the New York Times, and Bill Arning in the Village Voice, and has been a recipient of a National Endowment for the Arts Grant." In 2010, Frank Holliday was awarded grants from the Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation.

Solo exhibitions

Group exhibitions

Catalogs

Bibliography

Grants

Collections

Affiliations

Education

External links

  1. Keith Haring Journals By Keith Haring, Shepard Fairey, Robert Farris Thompson. Penguin, Jan 26, 2010 pages
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