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Marisol (Escobar), American (b. France), 1930-2016; The Party; 1965-1966;Dimensions variable Woman with elongated head and a silver bow on top, front of body;Woman in green and fuschia dress with headdress;Woman wearing beaded necklaces and a barrel skirt;Woman wearing a white dress with hand on her chin;Two women, one in a blue dress and the other in a yellow dress with a tv for her eyes;Group of three, including a man in a tuxedo, a woman in a red dress, and a woman in a white dress;Woman wearing black and gold brocade dress;Woman in a yellow dress, holding a glass;Woman wearing a yellow dress and a light up necklace;Serving man holding a tray with six glasses and a hand;Maid carrying a tray with 13 glasses;Wood panel with glass;Wood panel with bronze design at top;Wood panel with woman in white dress and shoes;; Toledo Museum of Art; 2005.42; Assemblage of 15 freestanding, life-size figures and three wall panels, with painted wood and carved wood, mirrors, plastic, television set, clothes, shoes, glasses, and other accessories;

Born María Sol Escobar in Paris to a Venezuelan family, by the mid-1960s Marisol had been lauded as the female artist of her generation proclaimed the “only girl artist with glamour” for her fashion sense and the “Latin Garbo” for her apparent exoticism, legendary beauty, and famed silences. Thousands lined up to see her remarkable life-size Pop Art sculptures, but much of the attention would evaporate as her work became more solemn following her retreat from the art world in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Her 2016 obituary in the Guardian announced her as “Marisol: the forgotten star of pop art.”

Far more than a muse or an icon of a single decade, Marisol created art that in radical ways addressed challenging and urgent issues of the twentieth and now twenty-first centuries. While celebrating her satirical and deceptively political sculptures and self-portraits of the 1960s, the exhibition also assembles, for the first time, lesser-known areas of her practice. In addition to her works about the life of the oceans, are those that engage with hunger, interpersonal violence, and modern gender norms. Her collaborative work with dance companies and her public sculpture, an important area of activity for Marisol from the 1970s onward, will at last receive their proper due. By examining and contextualizing her work over its long arc from the 1950s to the early 2000s, this internationally touring retrospective, the most comprehensive survey of her work ever assembled, demonstrates the extraordinary relevance of Marisol’s unique vision of culture and society.

The exhibition largely draws on the significant collection of artworks Marisol kept in her personal possession and left to the Buffalo AKG upon her death, in a historic and transformative bequest. The exhibition was realized with the support and important contributions of Julia Vázquez, former Curatorial Fellow at the Buffalo AKG.

Marisol: A Retrospective was on view at the Montreal Museum of Fine Arts, October 7, 2023–January 21, 2024 and the Toledo Museum of Art, March 2–June 2, 2024. After Buffalo, it will travel to the Dallas Museum of Art, February 23–July 6, 2025. 

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  • February 22

    Exhibition: Divergence of Legacy: Art of the American West in the 21st Century

    Tuscon, AZ

    How is art of the American West considered from the perspective of the 21st Century? To address this question, this exhibition will consider new...

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