Kathy Muehlemann (born 1950) is an American abstract painter.
Muehlemann was born in Austin, Texas and earned a B.F.A. from State University of New York, Empire State College in 1978. She also studied fresco painting in Italy.
Muehlemann is currently chair of the Art Department and professor of art at Randolph College.[1]
The artist describes her style as "metaphoric abstraction".[2] It consists of an allover deployment of geometric images, often suggesting celestial objects,[3] as in Hypnotic Flight, from the collection of the Honolulu Museum of Art. The Ackland Art Museum (Chapel Hill, NC), the Albright–Knox Art Gallery (Buffalo, NY), the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Grey Art Gallery (New York City), the Honolulu Museum of Art, the Maier Museum of Art (Lynchburg, VA), the Milwaukee Art Museum, the Museum of Contemporary Art (Miami, FL), the Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art (Kansas City, MO), and The Phillips Collection (Washington, D.C.) are among the public collections holding works by Muehlemann.[4]
Her husband, Jim Muehlemann is also an artist and professor at Randolph College.[5]