Geoffrey Chadsey Explained
Geoffrey Chadsey (born March 23, 1967) is an American artist known for his painting and drawings, based in Brooklyn, New York.[1] He is best known for his depictions of men, consisting of dense curving and parallel lines reminiscent of engraving to delineate imperfect bodies that often shift between genders.[2]
Biography
Chadsey was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. In 1989, he received an AB in visual and environmental studies from Harvard University, and in 1995, an MFA in Photography and Drawing from California College of the Arts.[3]
His conspicuously flawed bodies are often androgynous, as in Portrait II, in the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art.[4] The Honolulu Museum of Art and the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art are among the public collections holding work by Geoffrey Chadsey.[5] [6]
References
- Bowers, Keith, “Geoff Chadsey Exposes Private Horror in ‘shift, return’ at Electric Works”, SFWeekly, Feb. 8, 2011
- Chadsey, Geoffrey, James Jensen; David A. M. Goldberg, Boys in the Band: Geoffrey Chadsey Drawings 1998-2006, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, 2006
- Cheng, Dewitt. “This Month’s Top Exhibitions in the Western United States––Electric Works Gallery, San Francisco, California”, Huffington Post, Jan. 28, 2011
- Morse, Marcia. “Geoffrey Chadsey at the Contemporary Museum”, Art in America, Nov. 2007, p. 230.
Notes and References
- Web site: Geoffrey Chadsey: Grotesk Hybrids. 2012-07-04. artvantgarde. 2016-06-22.
- Web site: Geoffrey Chadsey at Electric Works Gallery. Helfand. Glen. 2011-01-03. artforum.com. 2016-06-22.
- Web site: Biography. James Harris Gallery. 2016-06-22. https://web.archive.org/web/20170610215113/http://jamesharrisgallery.com/artists/geoffrey-chadsey/biography/. 2017-06-10. dead.
- Web site: American Array. Honolulu Museum of Art. 2016-06-22.
- Web site: Geoffrey Chadsey. SFMOMA. 2016-06-22.
- Web site: Our Collection, Geoffrey Chadsey, For Us By Us . San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) . en-US . 2016-06-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20160701044613/http://archv.sfmoma.org/explore/collection/artwork/107377 . 2016-07-01 .