Jump to content

英文维基 | 中文维基 | 日文维基 | 草榴社区

Alexandra Rozenman

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alexandra Rozenman
Native name
Александра Михайловна Розенман
Born (1971-03-11) March 11, 1971 (age 53)
Moscow, Russia
OccupationContemporary American Artist & Art Educator
NationalityAmerican
Education
RelativesBella Rosenfeld Chagall
Website
www.alexandrarozenman.com

Alexandra Rozenman is a contemporary Russian-American painter, graphic designer, and book illustrator. She is recognized for her works where visual artifacts are used as the means for telling intricate, idiosyncratic, compelling stories. Her work has been on exhibit in the leading museums, including the National Centre for Contemporary Arts in her native Moscow, and deCordova Museum in Lincoln, Massachusetts. Rozenman lives in Boston and works in Somerville, Massachusetts.

Early life and education

[edit]

Rozenman was born in Moscow, Russia (then Soviet Union). Her early influences included an art school for gifted child artists at the Pushkin Museum - at that time the only venue for Western art shows in Moscow, both ancient and modern. Nina N. Kofman, an art educator, ran an art school for very young children at the museum, actively using its collection as a study aide. Several of Rozenman's works from that period have been shown at the international shows of children's art (in Russia, Japan, India, and Finland, among others). Later on, Rozenman studied with several dissident artists who went on to become famous in the West, including Grisha Bruskin. When Rozenman's family emigrated from Russia to the US in 1989, she continued her art education there, participating in the Studio Semester in New York Program at SUNY Empire State College (she graduated in 1995), and proceeding to Boston, where she earned her MFA from the School of Museum of Fine Arts[1] at Tufts University in 1997.

Career

[edit]

Rozenman worked in many places in the US, including the East Coast (Washington, New York City, and Boston), West Coast (Los Angeles), and Mid-West (East Lansing, Michigan, and Saint Paul, Minnesota), striving to capture her life experience, and developing a unique, highly personal way of expressing the American reality of today. She straddles the distinctly European world with recognizable Russian and Jewish influences (mostly of Marc Chagall, whose first wife, Bella Chagall, frequently depicted as a flying female figure in his early paintings, is Rozenman's great-aunt) and the uniquely American experience of freedom and thirst for deeper meaning of life interwoven with art. Today, Rozenman was a core member of the Fountain Street Gallery, from 2018, until it closed recently in 2024.[2]

Paintings

[edit]

Over three decades, starting as a child artist, Rozenman went through several periods, capturing life experiences in images. They reflect, on the one hand, her highly personal accounts of love, loss, and search for beauty, and on the other hand—the environments of Russia, California, New York City, Boston, Midwest, and Europe.

In one of her recent series of paintings, called Transplanted, Rozenman superimposes her own images with iconic works of European and American artists, including Leonardo da Vinci, Breugel, Turner, Monet, Matisse and Diebenkorn. This series, a part of which has been on display in Boston in 2013, represents the artist's search for a personal place in the story of the world art.

Graphics

[edit]

Rozenman started working on small graphics format in her teens, selling art from the sidewalks of Moscow busy Arbat Street thoroughfare. She returned to this form recently, partly for the purposes of book illustration.

Book illustration

[edit]

Rozenman illustrated several books, including "Two Hands Clapping" a collaborative book of drawings with the British poet Grace Andreacchi (Andromache Books, London, 2009). Grace Andreacchi also published the video Two Hands Clapping on YouTube.

She has recently finished illustrating "Sticky Leaves" by Mikhail Epstein, a Russian-American literary theorist and critical thinker.

Art school

[edit]

Since 2012, Rozenman has been running a popular art school with classes for children and adults in Allston, and later in Somerville, Massachusetts, offering classes, seminars, and workshops in experimental and classical painting and drawing.

Principal solo exhibitions

[edit]
  • 2020 Furniture in Unexpected Places, Fountain Street Fine Arts, Boston (scheduled)
  • 2018 Looking Forward, Looking Back, Finn Gallery, Greenwich, Connecticut
  • 2017 Blind Dates, Hudson Gallery, Gloucester, Massachusetts
  • 2016 Broken Memories, J's Bodzin Gallery, Fairfax, Virginia
  • 2015 In Motion, Hammond Art Gallery, Fitchburg College, Fitchburg, Massachusetts
  • 2013 Multicultural Arts Center, East Cambridge, Massachusetts
  • 2011 Contemporary Art Network, New York, New York
  • 2011 French Cultural Center, Boston, Massachusetts
  • 2010 Newton Free Library Art Gallery, Newton, Massachusetts
  • 2009 The Ann Loeb Bronfman Gallery, Washington DC
  • 2008 Gallery 360, Minneapolis, Minneapolis
  • 2008 Village Quill, New York, New York
  • 2007 The Tychman -Shapiro Gallery, Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • 2007 Gallery 13, Minneapolis, Minnesota
  • 2006 Goetemann Gallery, Gloucester, Massachusetts
  • 2002–2006 Argyle Zebra Gallery, Saint Paul, Minnesota
  • 1998–2000 Clark Gallery, Lincoln, Massachusetts
  • 2001 Creole Gallery, Lansing, Michigan
  • 1999 University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Tennessee
  • 1998 New England School of Art and Design
  • 1996–1998 Kingston Gallery, Boston, Massachusetts
  • 1996 Tish Gallery at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, MFA Exhibition, Medford, Massachusetts

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Alexandra Rozenman". Saatchi Art. Retrieved 2021-05-22.
  2. ^ "FOUNTAIN STREET". fsfaboston.com. FOUNTAIN STREET. Retrieved 13 December 2024.
[edit]