Peter Young (b. 1940, Pittsburgh) grew up in Los Angeles, and studied at Pomona College for two years before moving to New York in 1960. Young's paintings have continuously defied categorization since his early New York years showing with Leo Castelli and Richard Bellamy. He has been described variously as the first post-modernist painter, as well as a minimalist and an abstract surrealist. From the beginning, his paintings have addressed the rigid formal criteria of minimal art that prevailed in the 1960's. In Young's work, seemingly playful constellations of circles and dots replace restrictive geometric formalism, while colorfulness and pictorial density give way to surprising sensuality and poetic momentum.
The New York art world in the late 1960's was intimate and sectioned into easily identifiable social circles. The group that frequented Max Kansas City during this time was a smaller division of artist clusters that ignited several creative discussions and congregations through regular nightly bar drinking. The club closed in 1981, but was truly the birthplace for Peter Young and his contemporaries, a group of painters that included Dan Christensen, William Pettet, Larry Poons, and Ronnie Landfield, among others.
Although Young and his peers formed an artistic collective, each artist went on to pursue very individual stylistic endeavors. Young has long incorporated grids and geometric repetition in his work. Yet, even among these geometric compositions, his prescribed imperfections, dreamlike dialogues, and poetic psychedelics have allowed his work to fall outside of the codes of the purely minimal. Producing paintings that incorporate dots, bands, lines and blots, Young creates work that sometimes borders on abstract expressionism, but primarily is his own individualist and non-conformist style. By 1969, Young had begun to distance himself from American artistic circles. He travelled to Morocco and Spain, and spent time with the Boruca Tribe in Costa Rica. Following his travels, he landed in Bisbee Arizona, where he resides today. Despite distancing himself from the American art scene for several years, Young has continued to show in many significant exhibitions throughout the United States and abroad.
Following his first two solo exhibitions in 1967 and 1970 at the Noah Goldowsky Gallery, Young then exhibited at Richard Bellamy's Oil & Steel Gallery in Tribeca in 1984. Richard Bellamy also ran The Green Gallery, which opened in 1960 and showed works by many prominent artists, such as Robert Morris, Claes Oldenburg, Donald Judd, and James Rosenquist. Through Bellamy's interest in Young's work, it came to the attention of then P.S.1 Director, Alanna Heiss, and in 2007 the P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center dedicated a comprehensive survey exhibition to the artist's work, accompanied by a monograph, focusing on the period between 1963 and 1977.
His work has been included in exhibitions at The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art Tucson, Arizona; the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; The Guggenheim, New York; Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; Corcoran Art Gallery, Washington, D.C.; as well as the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Tate St. Ives, United Kingdom; Rolf Ricke, Cologne; and Documenta 5, Kassel, Germany. Peter Young's work is featured in collections, including the Allen Art Museum, Oberlin College, Ohio; the American University, Washington D.C.; the Australian National Gallery, Canberra, Australia; the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; the Neuberger Museum, Purchase College, New York; Phoenix Art Museum, Arizona; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Edwin A. Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita; University of Texas, Austin; and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, among others.
-
#80 - 2001, 2001
-
#54 - 1997, 1997
-
#36 - 1994, 1994
-
#32A - 1993, 1993
-
#23 - 1989, 1989
-
#28 - 1989, 1989
-
#44 - 1989, 1989
-
Study for a Painting, 1979
-
#8 - 1978, 1978
-
#8B - 1978, 1978
-
Study for a Painting, 1978
-
#31 - 1974, 1974
-
#32 - 1974, 1974
-
Untitled, 1974
-
#23 - 1973, 1973
-
#41 - 1973, 1973
-
NN15 - 1973, 1973
-
#4 - 1971, 1971
-
#5 - 1967, 1967
-
Peter Young and Maren Hassinger | Forms Unbound
November 7 - December 21, 2024Gallery Wendi Norris Headquarters 436 Jackson St, San Francisco Gallery Wendi Norris Offsite 38 Hotaling Place, San Francisco Gallery Wendi Norris is delighted to announce Peter Young and Maren Hassinger:...Read more -
Broken Lines | Julio César Morales, Yamini Nayar, Miguel Angel Ríos, Eva Schlegel, and Peter Young
October 18, 2018 - January 2, 2019GALLERY WENDI NORRIS CURATORIAL PROJECT 140 Maiden Lane, San Francisco, CA Gallery Wendi Norris, in collaboration with Whitewall Magazine and ISAIA , proudly presents Broken Lines, a curated exhibition within...Read more -
Threads of Memory
One Thousand Way of Saying Goodbye October 21 - November 15, 2017Gallery Wendi Norris’ final exhibition at 161 Jessie Street, Threads of Memory: One Thousand Ways of Saying Goodbye, presents a celebratory survey of the gallery’s program, including emblematic works by...Read more -
Peter Young | Ellipse Paintings
September 8 - November 4, 2016July 5, 2016 - San Francisco - For the first exhibition with Peter Young , Gallery Wendi Norris will exhibit nine large paintings on canvas and eight small paintings on...Read more
-
Art Dubai 2018
Val Britton, Yamini Nayar, and Peter Young March 21 - 24, 2018For Art Dubai 2018, Gallery Wendi Norris presents three artists whose work explores the mysterious notions found in places unknown or unattainable. Peter Young, America’s...Read more -
Frieze New York 2017
Spotlight | Peter Young: Mandala Paintings (1973-74) May 4 - 7, 2017At the peak of minimalism, when artists such as Donald Judd and Frank Stella focused on reducing their art to specific objects, Peter Young sought...Read more -
Dallas Art Fair 2017
Ana Teresa Fernández, Eva Schlegel, and Peter Young April 6 - 9, 2017For the 2017 Dallas Art Fair, Gallery Wendi Norris presents Post-Primitive, an exhibition of works by Ana Teresa Fernández, Eva Schlegel, and Peter Young. With...Read more
-
Los Angeles Times | In HBO’s ‘Brillo Box,’ the true story of how a $1,000 purchase became a $3-million Warhol work of art,
August 7, 2017By Christopher Knight , Art Critic Contact Reporter August 7, 2017 Apparently, we can’t get enough of Andy Warhol — or, at least the mythos...Read more -
Art in America | Up Close 2016: San Francisco
December 20, 2016Kevin Killian December 20, 2016 In 2016 we launched the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation/Art in America Arts Writing Fellowships, a joint project designed to foster art...Read more -
Hyperallergic | Are We Ready for the News that Peter Young Delivers Us?
November 24, 2013John Yau November 24, 2013 In the summer of 1969, Peter Young left New York — and his studio on the Bowery — and set...Read more -
The New York Times | Review: Peter Young's '#15' an 'Emerald City' standout
December 14, 2012Christopher Knight December 14, 2012 Peter Young's rambunctious 1972 painting '#15' is the only large work among 11 small or modestly sized abstractions by 11...Read more -
The Brooklyn Rail | TRACKS: Peter Young: An Unlikely Artist
September 1, 2007Ben La Rocco September, 2007 In the deeper recesses of my psyche, I preserve the ideal of the artist as a perennial radical someone consistently...Read more -
The New York Times | Kandy-Colored Dot-Flake Streamline Maverick
August 3, 2007Roberta Smith, August 3, 2007 Peter Young’s art is a blast from the past that singes the present. His almost-‐major career, which flourished...Read more