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John Mandel

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

John Mandel is an American visual artist and one of the first photorealists to emerge in New York. His figurative oil and acrylic paintings, often monochromatic, were a departure from ordinary subject depiction. His works involved movement in compressed space. Mandel's work was exhibited at Max Hutchinson Gallery in SoHo and in the first biennial exhibition at the Whitney Museum; his work has also been shown in the Los Angeles Institute of Contemporary Art, Santa Monica Museum of Art, and in the Max Hutchinson, Sidney Janis, Modernism, Thomas/Llewellen, and Krygier/Landau Contemporary Art.

Teaching

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Mandel has been a faculty member at his alma mater, Pratt Institute; Otis Art Institute; Art Center College of Design; and now teaches at California Institute of the Arts.

References

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  • Canaday, John (April 28, 1973). "In Mandel's Art, Superb Control". The New York Times. p. 27. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
  • Canaday, John (November 20, 1971). "Art: The Figure as Defined by Mandel; Nudes in Sharp Focus and Colorless Space Mastery of Technical Discipline Is Shown". The New York Times. p. 27. Retrieved 4 January 2010.
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