Untitled, (Print Studio, Ballinglen) detail of drawing underneath 2007 graphite on paper 55.88 x 76.2 cm 22 x 30 in
Retail Value: $2,500 USD €1,800 Euro
CURRENT BID : $450 USD €324 Euro
Lynne Clibanoff Lynne was born in 1944, Philadelphia, PA. She received a Bachelors of Fine Arts from Philadelphia College of Art in 1967. She has exhibited extensively throughout the United States and her work is in many public collections including The Ballinglen Arts Foundation, Ireland, The Free Library of Philadelphia, The Library of Congress, Washington DC, The Palmer Museum of Art Penn State University, The Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT. She was awarded a Ballinglen Fellowship in 2004 and a Returning Residency in 2006 where she did many drawings which were the basis for her subsequent work. Since the mid-1970's, Lynne’s works has been inspired by architectural interiors. Throughout her career, she has focused on small-scale box constructions that typically feature empty rooms with minimal detail except for archways, stairs, and windows. They are mysteriously empty of furnishings and personal belongings. There are lights that remain on but the source is never attainable. The small scale allows the viewer to visually walk through and explore. It is natural to move from side to side in an attempt to discover what is upstairs or around the corner. Clibanoff's sculpture embraces the imagination with their emptiness and uncanny familiarity inspired by architectural interiors. Throughout her career, she has focused on drawings and small-scale box constructions that re-conceive interior spaces excluding detail to focus on architectural elements— archways, stairs, and windows. Mysteriously empty of furnishings and personal belongings, light remains and the source is not always easily attainable. The scale allows the viewer to visually walkthrough and explore. It is natural to move from side to side in an attempt to discover what is upstairs or around the corner. Clibanoff's drawings & sculpture embrace the imagination with their uncanny familiarity.