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Robert Cottingham
is an American Pop-artist and a first generation photo realist. He established
himself in the early 1970's among such renowned artists as Richard Estes
and Chuck Close. Born in Brooklyn in 1935, he studied at the Pratt Institute,
began a brief career in Graphic Design, which later inspired him with
his painting of American urban signage.
He uses his camera as a sketchbook and for him printmaking is "a
great aid in painting because it continually gives him new insights into
technique." Over the years he has tended to work in series: buildings,
signs, words, numbers, letters, railroad imagery, and most recently, typewriters.
His work focuses on Americana. For example, many of his paintings and
prints depict the architecture and commercial signage of downtown America
in the forties and fifties that have now all but disappeared.
Robert Cottingham is of a generation of new 20th century painters, who
in finding themselves confronted with the 19th century rival of painting,
photography, successfully assimulated photography into their work. This
movement in art became known as Photo Realism. It developed quietly during
the early 1960's and emerged as the predominant style in the 'Documenta
5' 1972 in Kassel, Germany, an international exhibition that is one of
the most important in the world. Malcom Morley, Robert Cottingham, Robert
Bechtle, John Clemente Clark, Richard McClean, Ralph Goings and John Kacere
are among the luminaries of this international style. The majority of
the artists, as one might expect, are American.
Highlights of Robert Cottingham's international public collections include
The Art Council of Great Britain in London, The Art Institute of Chicago
in IL, The Baltimore Museum of Art in MD, The Birmingham Museum of Art
in AL, The Carnegie Institute in Pittsburgh, PA, The Cincinnati Art Museum
and the Cleveland Museum of Art in OH, The Delaware Art Museum, The Solomon
R. Guggenheim Museum of Art in New York, NY, The High Museum of Art in
Atlanta, GA, The Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington,
DC, The Hunter Museum of Art in Chattanooga, TN, the La Jolla Museum of
Contemporary Art in CA, The Metropolitan Museum of Art and The Museum
of Modern Art in New York, NY, The Tampa Museum of Art in FL, The Tate
Gallery in London, The Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, and Yale University
Art Gallery in New Haven, CT.
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