Jenny Scobel
Jenny Scobel (born 1955) is an American painter who lives and works in New York City. She makes paintings of women and children weaving a sense of innocence with foreboding or darkness. Her works, compared to Romaine Brooks, have been auctioned at Christie's and Sotheby's. Early and personal lifeJenny Scobel was born in Orrville, Ohio[1] and grew up in Mentor, Ohio.[2] At Cleveland Institute of Art, Scobel received her Bachelor of Fine Arts. She received her Master of Fine Arts from Pratt Institute.[3] She lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.[4] PaintingsScobel makes portraits or figurative paintings of children and women that blend a scene of innocent-like faces with images that suggest an underlying dark or disturbing story. The subtle mixed messages creates a "disarming perspective" and "present a mature approach to creating complex and disarming works.[3][4] Family tree of a young girl in the foreground, hands in her pockets and a disturbing background of a tree and running blood is one example.[4] She often works in wax and graphite.[3] Journalist Kristin Capp likened her work to that of Romaine Brooks.[5] Raphael Rubinstein of Art In America said "Scobel is an artist whose attention to detail reaches manic (and sublime) proportions. She poses her subjects - in this show, pensive young women - against wallpaper per whose intricate motifs would exhaust a less patient artist. These backgrounds often seem to reveal the subjects' thoughts, as if the women had dreamed the allegorical scenes into existence."[3] She gives lectures, such as the April 7, 2010 engagement at the School of Art at Illinois State.[3] Kerry James Marshall is her favorite artist.[2] WorksA few of Scobel's works are:
Her works are in the public collections at Hudson Valley for Contemporary Art, New York and the Rubell Family Collection in Miami, Florida.[1] ExhibitionsSolo exhibitionsScobel's work has been exhibited since about 1985. She has had solo shows at:
Group exhibitionsHer work has been exhibited with other artists in London, New York,[3] and Chicago.[13] In 2004, Scobel participated in the exhibition "Sagt holde Frauen: 15 zeitgenössische Kunstlerinnen und das Medium Zeichnung" at the Fridericianum in Kassel, Germany References
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