Manuel Neri: Recent Acquisitions from the Artist's Trust

February 18, 2017 - July 16, 2017 2/18/2017 12:00 AM 7/16/2017 12:00 AM

In 2015, the Nasher Sculpture Center was invited to select works to be donated from the Manuel Neri Trust. The resultant gift (six sculptures and ten drawings) comprises one of the most important public repositories of the artist’s work, highlighting significant developments in Neri’s career and providing insight into his working process. Manuel Neri: Recent Acquisitions from the Artist’s Trust celebrates this extraordinary gift and highlights the work of this important American sculptor and draftsman.

Manuel Neri (born 1930) has spent his entire career inventing and reinventing the figurative tradition, remaking the ancient language of the human body for his own time. Inspired early on by the boldly colorful paintings of the Bay Area Figurative Movement, which included his teachers Richard Diebenkorn and Nathan Oliveira, as well as Funk Art, an aesthetic derived from improvisatory jazz and Beat poetry, Neri creates novel representations of the body that combine expressive modeling, rough assemblage, and vibrant coloration. He sculpts intuitively, using additive and subtractive methods, typically applying wet plaster onto a skeletal armature before gouging its surface with a chisel and ax. Neri’s fragmented figures with vigorously worked surfaces recall the modernist examples of Rodin and Giacometti, as well as sculptural remnants from ancient Greece, Egypt, and Mexico. Covered with thick patches of paint, the works explore the relationship between surface and volume, along with the emotive effects of color, texture, and form.

Neri began sculpting the female figure in the late 1950s and met his primary model and muse, poet Mary Julia Klimenko, in 1972, initiating a collaborative relationship that lasted over thirty years. When asked to explain the carved and gouged surfaces of his figures, Neri replied, “I more or less see it as that destructive force we have upon ourselves and what we do to each other… [T]he female figure represents humanity to me and not just the woman alone.” At once awkward, sensual, and violent in tone, Neri’s works highlight the profundity of human experience, often incorporating elements that blur distinctions between physical and psychological space, as well as classicism and modernity.


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Dallas, Texas 75201
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