Blockhead by Amy Feldman
Irascible Leftovers by Amy Feldman
Oral Order by Amy Feldman
of old of oiled by Amy Feldman

Amy Feldman

1981–present · American

Amy Feldman works on a scale that refuses to be ignored. Her canvases, often measuring several metres across, carry gestural marks in white against charcoal grey, creating shapes that hover somewhere between body and architecture: blobs with presence, forms that suggest elbows or torsos without committing to either.

Key facts

Born
1981, American[1]
Wikipedia
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Biography

Born in New Windsor, New York, in 1981[1], Feldman trained at the Rhode Island School of Design (BFA, 2003) and Rutgers University (MFA, 2008), followed by a residency at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 2009. Her lineage is legible: the austere economy of Robert Ryman, the flat colour logic of Ellsworth Kelly, the playful geometry of Jean Arp and Shirley Jaffe all find echoes in her reduced, two-dimensional surfaces.

The work is deceptively limited in its means. Feldman restricts herself to a narrow tonal range and a vocabulary of soft-edged, loosely geometric forms, yet the paintings carry a physical authority that belies their graphic simplicity. Topology, morphology, and information transmission are her stated interests, and the paintings read like diagrams of thought: schematic but never cold.

A Guggenheim Fellowship in 2018, a Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant in 2013, and a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant in 2021 mark sustained institutional recognition. Her work is held by the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Sheldon Museum of Art, the Hall Art Foundation in Germany, and the Vanhaerents Art Collection in Brussels. She lives and works in Brooklyn.

Timeline

  1. 1981Born in New Windsor, New York.
  2. 2003Received a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design.
  3. 2008Received an MFA from Rutgers University.
  4. 2009Participated in a residency at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.
  5. 2013Received a Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant.
  6. 2018Received a Guggenheim Fellowship.
  7. 2021Received a Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What is Amy Feldman known for?
    Amy Feldman is known for her large canvases featuring gestural marks in white against charcoal grey. These create shapes that suggest body parts or architectural forms. Her stated interests include topology, morphology, and information transmission, and her paintings read like diagrams of thought.
  • Who was Amy Feldman?
    Amy Feldman, born in New Windsor, New York, in 1981[1], is an artist who works on large canvases with gestural marks in white against charcoal grey. These marks create shapes that suggest body parts or architecture. She trained at the Rhode Island School of Design and Rutgers University, and she also attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.
  • What was Amy Feldman's art style?
    Amy Feldman's art style is characterised by a narrow tonal range and soft-edged, loosely geometric forms. Her paintings carry a physical authority that belies their graphic simplicity. The biography notes echoes of Robert Ryman, Ellsworth Kelly, Jean Arp, and Shirley Jaffe in her reduced, two-dimensional surfaces.
  • When was Amy Feldman born?
    Amy Feldman was born in 1981[1].

Sources

Editorial draws on the following primary and tertiary references for Amy Feldman.

  1. [1] wikipedia Wikipedia: Amy Feldman Used for: biography, birth dates, death dates, identifiers, movement attribution, nationality.
  2. [2] book guggenheim-19artistsemergen00solo Used for: biography.
  3. [3] book guggenheim-emergingartists100wald Used for: biography.
  4. [4] book guggenheim-newhorizonsiname00denn Used for: biography.

Editorial overseen by Solis Prints. Sources verified 2026-06-18. Click a source for details, or hover over [N] in the page above to preview.

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