Bruno David Gallery: Friday, 27 March 2015
CHRIS KAHLER On Paper
Max Starkloff: A Retrospective
Project Room
Max Starkloff: A Life
Media Arts Room
March 27 – April 25, 2015
Opening Reception: Friday, March 27, 2015 from 6 to 9 pm
Gallery Talk + Reading Saturday, April 25 at 5:30 pm
Bruno David Gallery is pleased to announce the opening reception of Chris Kahler: On Paper and a retrospective exhibition of Max Starkloff 1960s paintings on Friday, March 27th from 6 to 9 pm at its Grand Center gallery. “On Paper” offers a unique body of work emerging from a three-year exploration of drawing, systematic drafting, and watercolor techniques. Kahler’s exploration of negative space, light, and intersecting planes has resulted in arresting juxtapositions of biomorphic and ephemeral forms. As with “Disequencing”, Kahler’s 2013 exhibition of paintings at Bruno David Gallery, these drawings explore the “boundaries between physical and psychological time, between phenomena and the variable conceptual filters for understanding them.” In conjunction with the exhibition, Bruno David Gallery Publications will publish a catalogue on the artist’s work with an exhibition history and bibliography.
In the Project Room, we are pleased to introduce a retrospective exhibition of paintings by Max Starkloff. In conjunction with the exhibition Max Starkloff: A Retrospective; Bruno David Gallery Publications will publish a catalog on the artist’s work with an exhibition history and bibliography and essays by Robert Duffy and Charles E. Claggett.
In 1959, at the age of 21, Max Starkloff was in a car accident that left him paralyzed from the neck down. His doctors doubted he would live longer than a few days and, if he survived, his quality of life would be diminished. Max’s mother, divorced and supporting three children, tried for nearly four years to care for Max at home before reluctantly placing him in a nursing home managed by Franciscan Brothers in Eureka, Missouri. Max, aged 25, was sent to a facility for men, whose average age was 80. In the nursing home, Max met Brother Matthew, a 40-year-old Franciscan artist. He offered to teach Max how to paint holding the brush clenched between his teeth. Brother Matthew positioned Max close to the canvas, squeezed tubes of colors onto the palette, and began teaching Max how to draw simple shapes. By the winter of 1964, only four months after meeting Brother Matthew, Max began painting six hours a day. His work was exhibited at Kenrick Seminary and Saint Louis University. Max’s last exhibit was at Maryville College in December 1969 at which he presented 30 paintings.
In 1969, his sense of perception was shifting. Watching television as the Civil Rights Movement unfolded, Max began to wonder whether his rights and others with disabilities were being addressed. He gave up painting and became a leader in the movement for independent living and disability rights. He co-founded the Paraquad organization with his wife Colleen in 1970, and established it as one of the first 10 federally funded Independent Living Centers in the nation. Additionally, in 1983, he co-founded the National Council on Independent Living (with Marca Bristo, Judy Heumann, Lex Frieden and Charlie Carr). Max would go on to establish the Starkloff Disability Institute in 2003.
Max Starkloff’s legacy of dedication to the ongoing fight for Civil Rights has changed the face of our nation, helping America to redefine the meaning of independence for the 21st century. Starkloff lobbied for legislation for curb cuts and disabled parking, as well as for the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990. He won a President’s Distinguished Service Award in 1991, and was awarded a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame. Max Starkloff was born in St. Louis, Missouri in 1937. He passed away in December 2009. The exhibition Max Starkloff: A Retrospective will be open to the public from March 27 to June 27, 2015
In the Media Arts Room, the gallery presents a short documentary (9:20 min) “Max Starkloff: A Life” by Gary Womack, on the life of Max Starkloff and his legacy as a Civil Rights leader and as an artist.
Hours: Wednesday through Saturday 10:00 AM – 5:00 PM. The gallery is located between N. Grand and N. Spring Avenues and is wheelchair accessible. Accessible street crosswalk is at the corner of N. Spring Avenue and Washington Boulevard.
BRUNO DAVID GALLERY
3721 WASHINGTON BOULEVARD
ST. LOUIS MO 63108 USA
1.314.531.3030
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home