Lynne Golob Gelfman
pink grey black, 2006
acrylic on canvas
5 x 5 x 2.5 in.
Lynne Golob Gelfman pink grey black, 2006
Lynne Golob Gelfman (1944-2020) was a Miami-based artist known for her groundbreaking experimentation with abstract painting techniques. Her first solo show was a prize awarded by Miami Metropolitan Museum and Art Center in 1974, then under the leadership of Arnold Lehman. Her prolific art career includes over 40 solo shows and she has exhibited in galleries and museums both nationally and internationally. In 2018, the Perez Art Museum Miami (PAMM) presented the solo exhibition, Grids: A Selection of Paintings by Lynne Golob Gelfman, which examined her practice from the 1970s onwards. Gelfman explored the natural world through a language of mark-making and investigation that transcended conventional artmaking.
Lynne Golob Gelfman (1944-2020) was born in Waukegan, IL and grew up in New York. She graduated from Sarah Lawrence College, (BA, 1966) and the School of the Arts, Columbia University, (MFA, 1968). She taught art at the Dalton School from 1968 until 1972, the year that she and her husband started a flower farm outside Bogotá, and moved to Miami, an import gateway for the flowers. For Gelfman, who had loved Bogotá as an American Field Service student in 1961, the culture and landscape of Colombia as well as the diverse, subtropical world of Miami, are important influences, along with her strong ties to New York. In Miami, she taught at various colleges and universities, including Florida International University (FIU), University of Miami (UM), and Miami Dade Community College North (MDCC). She was a dedicated arts educator at the Barnyard Children’s Art Collective in the Coconut Grove neighborhood of Miami for fifteen years and was passionate about providing access to the arts to children from diverse backgrounds and communities.
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