© Jennifer Uhrhane
Libbie Mark shows small to medium oils with paper collage elements. One is a high-toned noonday picture dominated by a central red that tornadoes up into yellow, surrounded by green and blue-grey. Another abstraction has a midnight carnival flavor in its deep purples and blues sparked with red and surprises of veiny greens.
–Jill Johnston, ARTnews5
Libbie Mark’s colorful paintings and collages have no titles, so you play a numbers game, and two good bets are 19 and 20 – a green-grey moody “landscape” and a red-blue Oriental “garden.” (fig. 19). Amidst “just more” abstract expressionist paintings, many semi-abstract gems sparkle.
–L. E. Levick, New York Journal-American6
This first one-woman exhibition is of educated non-objective oils and collages.
–John Gruen, New York Herald Tribune7
An exhibit of oil paintings and collages by Libbie Mark is on display at the Knapik Gallery through June 2. Miss Mark’s handsome abstractions, high textured and rich in color brilliance, show a profound and vividly sensuous response to visual experience. Areas of Prussian and Cerulean blue offset deep purples and wine reds. Chromatic variations of reds and pinks interweave, revealing minor color shocks and the mottled texture of dulled silver foil. In one semi-abstract flower still-life, color diffuses in small bright dabs, but the overall effect is scintillating. Considering the technique used in many of these collages, Miss Mark’s spontaneity is all the more remarkable. With a foundation of acrylic paint, varied types of tissue-thin paper are glued onto a gessoed masonite board to form interesting transparencies of color and texture. These paintings are assuredly the work of a mature, imaginative, and dynamic artist.
–Jane Jaffe, Manhattan East8
Libbie Mark lets herself be taken by the moment, seduced by the creative space that it gives her permission to inhabit.
This is why we find a bit of everything in her abstract compositions, which are alternately dark and joyful. Together, the works enliven the little gallery with a healthy dose of artistic energy.
Her collages, too, are at once remarkable and discreet, where she succeeds in merging and marrying dissimilarities in ways that subtly denote that she is both a person of taste and an artist in love with her chosen profession.
–Saint-Evremond, France-Amérique9 (translated)
His letter reads:
Dear Mrs. Mark,
As an admirer of your art I shall treasure an autograph of you [sic]. You will make me happy in sending it to me.
I am
Very sincerely yours,
Ernest F. Manfred
Mark had quite varied company. Other autographs Manfred sought and collected included those from a wide range of personalities: musicians Liberace10 and Chuck Mangione,11 as well as French Army General Jean-Marie de Lattre de Tassigny12 and the Governor of South Carolina James F. Byrnes.13
Endnotes
1. All of the information about Mark, unless otherwise cited, was provided by Mark’s daughter and son, and obtained through e-mail messages to and phone conversations with the author between June 2016 and March 2019.
2. Knapik Gallery advertisement, New York Times, May 27, 1962, X19.
3. Archival materials for the artist are held by the Libbie Mark Provincetown Fund Collection.
4. Lisa Coldiron, Image Specialist for Special Projects, Image Collections, National Gallery of Art, e-mail message to author, February 25, 2019. The National Gallery of Art Library’s Image Collections contain 27,000 negatives and 1,300 photographs by Rabin. “Featured Photographers: Nathan Rabin,” National Gallery of Art, accessed January 30, 2019, https://www.nga.gov/research/library/imagecollections/photographers-and-campaign-organizers.html
5. J. J. (Jill Johnston), “Reviews and previews: New names this month,” ARTnews 61 (May 1962): 18.
6. L. E. Levick, “Gallery Guide,” New York Journal-American, May 19, 1962, 7.
7. John Gruen, “Art Tour,” New York Herald Tribune, May 19, 1962, 11.
8. Jane Jaffe, “News and Views of the Galleries: Mark at Knapik,” Manhattan East, May 24, 1962, 4.
9. Saint-Evremond, “Libbie Mark chez Knapik,” France-Amérique, June 17, 1962, 15.
10. “Liberace – Inscribed Picture Postcard Signed,” History for Sale, accessed July 30, 2020, https://www.historyforsale.com/liberace-inscribed-picture-postcard-signed/dc76352.
11. “Mangione, Chuck. Photograph signed,” James Cummins Bookseller, accessed July 30, 2020, https://www.jamescumminsbookseller.com/pages/books/256656/chuck-mangione/photograph-signed.
12. “Marshal Jean Delattre – Typed Letter Signed 10/13/1951,” History for Sale, accessed July 30, 2020, https://www.historyforsale.com/marshal-jean-delattre-typed-letter-signed-10-13-1951/dc102218.
13. “Associate Justice James F. Byrnes – Typed Letter Signed 11/10/1958,” History for Sale, accessed July 30, 2020, https://www.historyforsale.com/associate-justice-james-f-byrnes-typed-letter-signed-11-10-1958/dc84845.
14. Artist resume, Sidney Delevante Art and Artist Files, Smithsonian American Art and Portrait Gallery Library, Smithsonian Libraries, Washington, DC.
15. Artist resume, Irving Lehman Papers, Special Collections Research Center, Syracuse University Libraries.
16. “Exhibitions,” Ben Wilson American Artist, accessed January 19, 2018, https://benwilsonamericanartist.org/exhibitions/.
Jennifer Uhrhane has worked in curatorial, collections management, and registrarial roles in museum, corporate and private art collections for almost 20 years. She also consults with artists and families regarding art collection/archive documentation, management and estate planning. Uhrhane holds a BFA in photography from Rhode Island School of Design, a Certificate in Museum Studies and Administration from Tufts University, and an MA in Art History from Boston University.