BOB THOMPSON: A PAINTER WHO SUBVERTED THE CANON

A RETROSPECTIVE EXHIBITION RECALLS THE SHORT BUT ACCOMPLISHED CAREER OF A VISIONARY ARTIST


Bob Thompson: This House is Mine
October 11, 2022 – January 8, 2023
Hammer Museum
10899 Wilshire Boulevard
Los Angeles CA 90024
Telephone: 310-443-7000


by Sarah Fensom, brutjournal’s U.S.A. West Coast bureau chief


Organized by the Colby College Museum in Waterville, Maine, the retrospective exhibition Bob Thompson: This House in Mine is now marking the end of a national tour with a final showing at the Hammer Museum at UCLA in Los Angeles. Bringing together 50 paintings by its subject, a black American painter who enjoyed a short but notable career in late 1950s and the 1960s, the exhibition draws upon more than 40 public and private collections. (The artist Alex Katz and his foundation donated five paintings to the Colby, which provided an impetus for the making of this informative exhibition).

Bob Thompson, Untitled (Perseus and Andromeda), 1964, gouache on paper, 10 × 10 1/2 inches (25.4 × 26.7 centimeters). Private collection, courtesy of Donald Morris Gallery. ©Michael Rosenfeld Gallery LLC, New York. Photo: Jerry L. Thompson/Art Resource, New York

This House is Mine is the first retrospective of Thompson’s work to be presented in nearly 25 years. Thelma Golden, who now serves as the director of the Studio Museum in Harlem, curated the last major Thompson survey, which was shown at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York in 1998.

LOG IN or SUBSCRIBE
to read the whole article.