January 13 - February 19, 2005
Margaret Thatcher Projects is pleased to exhibit the new works of Linn Meyers. This will be the artist's first solo exhibition since joining the gallery last year.Linn Meyers' recent body of works range from intimate notebook-size pieces to imposing human scale. All the new works are on Mylar. The artist uses archival markers with extra fine, medium point or broad-tipped pens. Meyers draws only two things: lines and dots. Her colors are selected from an array of offerings produced by commercial marker companies. They are not the typical artists' colors, rather they have names like Saliva Blue, Deep Salmon and Crimson Lake. Unlike Agnes Martin who used a pencil and ruler to make the horizontal lines in her paintings, Meyers makes her lines and dots unaided. Inevitably her lines shift slightly. Eventually miniscule aberrations produce undulating overall surfaces. In a certain number of the drawings the eye is fooled into reading an image of vast rippling waters, or folds of cloth. Meyers accepts this degeneration of her original intentions.
Linn Meyers is a recipient of the prestigious Pollack-Krasner grant. Her works are in the permanent collections of the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Washington, DC, New Britain Museum of American Art, Connecticut, Pfizer Corporation, Swiss Re, Sprint and Cooper Union, as well as numerous private collections.
This exhibition is accompanied by a color catalog, with an essay by Lorraine Adams. The gallery thanks Ms. Adams for the show title, and for its liberal borrowing of her text.
