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Janet Alling

  • Biography
  • Works
  • Exhibitions
  • Press
  • Publications
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  • "I choose the plants first. They're the living things before me. I look at flowers from different angles and use different angles on the same plant, which contributes to its flatness. I make my compositions piece-meal–they are not still lifes." 

    –Janet Alling

  • B. 1939, NEW YORK CITY, NY

    LIVES AND WORKS IN PROVIDENCE, RI

    DOWNLOAD ARTIST CV

  • In 1964, Janet Alling studied among a legendary generation of artists, including Chuck Close, Jennifer Bartlett, Richard Serra, Nancy Graves,...

    Janet Alling, 1975. Photograph by Art Anderson

    In 1964, Janet Alling studied among a legendary generation of artists, including Chuck Close, Jennifer Bartlett, Richard Serra, Nancy Graves, Janet Fish, Rackstraw Downs, and Brice Marden. They turned contemporary art making into a revolution of material, scale, subject, and perception. In that vein, Alling focused her gaze on capturing and magnifying the natural world to redefine a category of painting long regarded as decorative and conventional.
     

    After graduating from Yale, Alling moved to New York City and had her debut show in 1972 at 55 Mercer, a Co-Op space in SoHo. In his New York Times review of the exhibition, Peter Schjeldahl placed her among a group of artists who were “advancing realist painting in an important way. Almost brutal in its scale manipulations and its assertions of detail, but full of acridity and sweetness of personality, work like Alling’s reintroduces us to the visible world with a bang.”

     

    Five decades later, Alling continues to investigate the essence and power of flora and fauna through observation and honed technique. With an unconventionally modern approach, Janet animates large scale leaves and petals, drawn from life or photographs, and compiles imagined flower gatherings. Alling credits Monet’s spirit and Malevich’s formalism, to classical music, as inspirations. She places her own type of realism in an American tradition that harkens back to Thomas Eakins: an “ambiguity of seeing–that it discloses both what’s actual and what’s possible–is pushed to extremes" in her work. Not intent on a photorealist effect, Janet imbues her subjects with their forever changing nature, making them equal parts character studies and vibrant happenings.


  •  

    "Alling's flowers are decorous, contained, and make no overture to fashion. The mystery of meaning reminds me of Emily Dickinson.” 

    –Alex Katz


     


  •  
    PATTERNS
    Coleus, 1971  oil on linen  28 x 20 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Red Coleus Field II, 1975  oil on linen  40 x 28 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Yellow-Green Coleus II, 1975  oil on linen  42 x 30 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Flying Coleus 1, 1970  oil on linen  12 x 10 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Yellow-Green Coleus I, 1975  oil on linen  30 x 22 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Pink Coleus III, 1973  oil on linen  60 x 54 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Coleus, 1971
  • 'A distinctive play with the relation of figure to ground pervades most of Alling's work, in both her large, mature...
    "A distinctive play with the relation of figure to ground pervades most of Alling's work, in both her large, mature oils of the 1980s, such as Grouping, Storm Approaching, Autumn, and Apocalypse, and her seemingly lighthearted and incidental watercolors. She often employs elements of portraiture that radically disconnect the figure from its setting to better reveal its character.... This effect automatically indicates a deep space beyond the surface and, as a result, a fictional world... In many of her flower paintings, the point where the stem meets the ground is never shown... Yet, clearly, these flowers are rooted somewhere; they are presented as real and vibrantly alive.  
     
    This kind of paradox is especially true of her begonias, whose implausible patterns are rendered as entirely natural. It's tempting to say she employs the conventions of Surrealism to this end. But while the Surrealists depicted impossible objects in real space, Alling renders the strangeness of real nature in a dream space. The radical disjunctions between figure and ground in her paintings defies laws of perspective, but this space contains no impossible objects. On the contrary, the weirdnesss in nature emerges all the more forcefully by her placement of totally believable flowers in unbelievable space. Through art, Alling undertakes the difficult task of showing that reality is stranger than art–and she suceeds."
     
    -Bob Stone, excerpt from "Janet Alling's Passionate Eye," American Artist, October 1994 p. 30-34, 73-74
     
     
  •  
    GARDENS
    Grouping, 1984  oil on canvas  60 x 72 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Beauty and the Beast, 1983  oil on canvas  57 x 68 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Milieu , 1984  oil on canvas  66 x 72 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Partly Sunny, 1984  oil on canvas  57 x 68 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Harvest, 1985  oil on canvas  60 x 72 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Apocalypse, 1983  oil on canvas  57 x 68 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Harvest, 1985  oil on canvas  60 x 72 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    The Conductor, 1986  oil on canvas  48 x 72 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Comet, 1987  oil on canvas  44 x 60 in (Larger version of this image opens in a popup).
    Grouping, 1984
  • Janet Alling, 652 Broadway Loft, 1990s. Photograph by Arthur Anderson
  • Works
    • Janet Alling, Coleus, 1971
      Janet Alling, Coleus, 1971
    • Janet Alling, Ode to Magritte (Rex Begonia V), 1978
      Janet Alling, Ode to Magritte (Rex Begonia V), 1978
    • Janet Alling, African Violets V, 1980
      Janet Alling, African Violets V, 1980
    • Janet Alling, Beauty and the Beast, 1983
      Janet Alling, Beauty and the Beast, 1983
    • Janet Alling, Paris I, 1991
      Janet Alling, Paris I, 1991
    • Janet Alling, Dark Matter: Garden Cosmos, 2011
      Janet Alling, Dark Matter: Garden Cosmos, 2011
    • Janet Alling, Summer Vacation I, 2014
      Janet Alling, Summer Vacation I, 2014
    • Janet Alling, Caladium 11: Puff, 2019
      Janet Alling, Caladium 11: Puff, 2019
    • Janet Alling, Coleus A–Swoosh, 2019
      Janet Alling, Coleus A–Swoosh, 2019
    • Janet Alling, Web Series #1-4, 1989
      Janet Alling, Web Series #1-4, 1989
    • Janet Alling, Plant/Planet #10, 1985
      Janet Alling, Plant/Planet #10, 1985
    • Janet Alling, Silver Begonias with Wood, 1992
      Janet Alling, Silver Begonias with Wood, 1992
    • CityCentre, Houston, TX, 2024.
      CityCentre, Houston, TX, 2024.
    • CityCentre, Houston, TX, 2024.
      CityCentre, Houston, TX, 2024.
  • Exhibitions
    • JANET ALLING

      JANET ALLING

      PLANT LIFE 2 Mar - 6 Apr 2024
      Read more
  • Press
    • Janet Alling, "Coleus L–Push," 2019, oil on linen, 40 x 40 in

      Beautiful Plant Paintings Come to Life in Houston

      Three Spring Art Exhibitions Worth Catching In the Bayou City
      Ericka Schiche, PAPERCITY, March 27, 2024
    • Janet Alling, Beauty and the Beast, 1983, oil on canvas, 57 x 68 inches

      Janet Alling: Plant Life

      Gallery Row: A Seasonal Spotlight on Six Texas Galleries
      Nancy Zastudil, ACTX Arts and Culture Texas, February 10, 2024
    • Janet Alling’s Passionate Eye

      Bob Stone, AMERICAN ARTIST, October 1, 1994
    • Garden of Earthly Delights

      VIVA, August 1, 1978
    • Main image caption

      The Changing Gallery Scene: Return of the Co-Op

      Peter Schjeldahl, THE NEW YORK TIMES, September 17, 1972
  • There is a short story by O. Henry, 'The Last Leaf,' about a woman dying of pneumonia. From her window,...

     

     

     

    There is a short story by O. Henry, "The Last Leaf," about a woman dying of pneumonia. From her window, she watched a vine growing on the neighbor's wall; slowly, the leaves dropped, and she thought she would die when the last leaf fell. Her neighbor, a young woman artist, knew this. One night, before the last leaf let go, she discreetly went to the wall and painted a leaf on the vine, the last leaf.

     

    In 1955, my mother, who had terminal breast cancer, took me to see the film based on that story. She believed in me. She knew I was an artist and, in this way, was guiding me on my life's journey. 

     

    And so, Destiny, Fate, Serendipity, Chance, Coincidence, Luck, Magic, Instinct, and Impulse enter one's life as do people. My understanding of this happened at a late age. ...Looking back, there is a pattern, a lifetime's journey through floral paintings in many settings. Now, an octogenarian, I've come full circle. I am painting watercolors of patterned leaves.

    –Janet Alling
    Preface, Unanticipated 2022
     
     
     

     
  • Publications
    • Janet Alling

      Janet Alling

      Plant Life Seven Sisters, 2024
      paperback, 48 pages
      Dimensions: 8.27 x 11.69 inches
      Read more
805 rhode place 
suite 500
houston, tx 77019
346.618.1011
info@sevensisters.gallery
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