Barbara Westermann (born Swiezinski, in Werdohl, Germany in 1958) is a conceptual and site-specific sculptor, artist and teacher living in Red Hook, New York. She has lived and worked in New York City for many years and continues to work on projects there and in Berlin.
She received her B.A. in Architecture & Urban Planning from the University of Kassel, Germany, 1982-77 and her MFA in Sculpture from Fachhochschule Koln, Germany, 1985-82. She studied with Daniel Spoerri [1] and Eduardo Paolozzi. After moving to New York City, she studied at the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program and completed the education certificate at the School of Visual Arts.
Westermann is a sculptor and installation artist. Her sculptures, prints, and drawings are minimalist and conceptual, with an emphasis on social sculpture, urban planning, geometry, geophysical mapping, and music. Westerman uses site-specific work that involves sculpture, prints, architecture, and engineering. She uses sculpture to embody utilitarian objects.
Westermann was the co-editor of Kunstforum International issue number 51 [2] with Brigitte Caster. She has shown her work widely, including single shows at Kunstverein Malkasten in Düsseldorf, the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Museum fur Neue Kunst Museum in Freiburg, Germany. She delivered a lecture called 'documenta urbana' at the Documenta 13 [3] with Critical Art Ensemble in Kassel, Germany and showed a video during the 'undocumenta' [4] of 2021.
She completed a fellowship at the Raketenstation Stiftung Hombroich in the fall of 2012 and was a fellow at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Virginia. She publishes prints with Clay Street Press in Cincinnati.
Her art has been shown at the Tate [5] in London, the Whitney Biennial, [6] MoMA PS1, the Dia Art Foundation, Momenta Art, Paula Cooper Gallery, Ronald Feldman Gallery, E|AB Fair, Clay Street Press in Cincinnati, Proteus Gowanus, the Museum of the National Library of Spain, [7] and numerous other venues in the States and Europe.
Recent projects include work at Turley Gallery, [8] Lexington Arts & Science, [9] Neon Kunst [10] and Women's Studio Workshop, Queens Council on the Arts [11] and teaching through the Bard College Lifetime Learning Institute [12] at the Hessel Museum of Art.
She was included in Flugblätter at Cross Lane Projects, Kendal, [13] Art for the Future [14] at Tufts University and Super Dakota gallery [15] in Brussels. She has shown her work with Clay Street Press Gallery in Cincinnati, OH and Cade Tompkins Gallery in Providence, RI.
This article needs additional or more specific
categories. (July 2024) |
Barbara Westermann (born Swiezinski, in Werdohl, Germany in 1958) is a conceptual and site-specific sculptor, artist and teacher living in Red Hook, New York. She has lived and worked in New York City for many years and continues to work on projects there and in Berlin.
She received her B.A. in Architecture & Urban Planning from the University of Kassel, Germany, 1982-77 and her MFA in Sculpture from Fachhochschule Koln, Germany, 1985-82. She studied with Daniel Spoerri [1] and Eduardo Paolozzi. After moving to New York City, she studied at the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program and completed the education certificate at the School of Visual Arts.
Westermann is a sculptor and installation artist. Her sculptures, prints, and drawings are minimalist and conceptual, with an emphasis on social sculpture, urban planning, geometry, geophysical mapping, and music. Westerman uses site-specific work that involves sculpture, prints, architecture, and engineering. She uses sculpture to embody utilitarian objects.
Westermann was the co-editor of Kunstforum International issue number 51 [2] with Brigitte Caster. She has shown her work widely, including single shows at Kunstverein Malkasten in Düsseldorf, the La Jolla Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Museum fur Neue Kunst Museum in Freiburg, Germany. She delivered a lecture called 'documenta urbana' at the Documenta 13 [3] with Critical Art Ensemble in Kassel, Germany and showed a video during the 'undocumenta' [4] of 2021.
She completed a fellowship at the Raketenstation Stiftung Hombroich in the fall of 2012 and was a fellow at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts in Virginia. She publishes prints with Clay Street Press in Cincinnati.
Her art has been shown at the Tate [5] in London, the Whitney Biennial, [6] MoMA PS1, the Dia Art Foundation, Momenta Art, Paula Cooper Gallery, Ronald Feldman Gallery, E|AB Fair, Clay Street Press in Cincinnati, Proteus Gowanus, the Museum of the National Library of Spain, [7] and numerous other venues in the States and Europe.
Recent projects include work at Turley Gallery, [8] Lexington Arts & Science, [9] Neon Kunst [10] and Women's Studio Workshop, Queens Council on the Arts [11] and teaching through the Bard College Lifetime Learning Institute [12] at the Hessel Museum of Art.
She was included in Flugblätter at Cross Lane Projects, Kendal, [13] Art for the Future [14] at Tufts University and Super Dakota gallery [15] in Brussels. She has shown her work with Clay Street Press Gallery in Cincinnati, OH and Cade Tompkins Gallery in Providence, RI.
This article needs additional or more specific
categories. (July 2024) |