Chryssa
1933 - 2013, Athens / New York
Chryssa (Chryssa Vardea-Mavromichali) was an American artist, born in Greece, who is best known for her monumental assemblages of neon tubes and large-scale minimalistic paintings on canvas. Her work refers to early characteristics of pop art, minimalism and light art.
Today Chryssa is considered as an important representative of these artistic movements and an early pioneer in light art. In the 1960s, she had major solo exhibitions in museums such as the Guggenheim, the MoMA or the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York. She was represented by the most established galleries of her time, such as Leo Castelli, Pace and Denise René. She had an important influence on artist such as Andy Warhol or Agnes Martin, with whom she lived in an on-and-off relationship during most part of the 60's.
Chryssa studied in Paris from 1953 to 1954, where she was taught by Alberto Giacometti and met artists such as André Breton and Max Ernst. From 1954 to 1955 she attended the California School of Fine Art in San Francisco and then moved to New York. Soon after her arrival Chryssa found her inspiration in large scale neon signs at Times Square. She was stimulated and inspired by the visual impact of urban America and its pop and advertising culture. Her early paintings and sculptures were innovative experiments using typography, newsprint collages, metal molds and alphabetic forms in raised relief. Chryssa's interest in communication and the use of letters was first expressed through small plaster (baked clay) tablets entitled Cycladic Books in 1955, followed by tablets and plaques with single letters, or variations on letter forms. From 1962 onwards, Chryssa used neon lights for her artworks and was thus one of the very first artists to transform this advertising tool into an art medium.
In 1992 she decided to leave New York and to move to a studio in Athens, where she was still working, but almost as an outsider far away from a professional and artistic exchange. She avoided to be in the limelight. And as a consequence of her ongoing psychological problems, she didn’t maintain the contact to her gallerists. In 2013 she passed away. Most of her works were donated to the Museum of Modern Art in Athens, which displays large installations in its permanent collection.
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Selected solo exhibitions
2024 Wrightwood 659, Chicago, USA
2023 Menil Collection, Houston
2023 Dia Foundation, NY, USA
2022 - 2023 MOMus-Museum Alex Mylona
2022 Blue Velvet Projects, Zürich
2017 Documenta XVI, Kassel, Germany
2007 Hirshhorn Museum, Washington D.C., USA
2005 Mihalarias Art Centre, Athens
1997 Leo Castelli Gallery, NY, USA
1990 Mihalarias Art Center, Athens, Greece
1988 Leo Castelli Gallery, NY, USA
1979 Musée d'art moderne, Paris, France
1977 Documenta VI, Kassel, Germany
1974 Museum of Modern Art, Montreal, Canada
1973 Galerie Denis René, NY, USA
1972 Whitney Museum of American Art, NY, USA
1972 Venice Biennial, Italy
1970 Whitney Annual (now Biennial), NY, USA
1970 Galleria d’Arte Contemporanea, Torino, Italy
1969 Obelisk Gallery, Boston, USA
1969 Galerie Rive Droite, Paris, France
1969 Galerie der Spiegel, Cologne, Germany
1968 Documenta IV, Kassel, Germany
1968 Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, USA
1968 Harvard University, Cambridge, USA
1966 Pace Gallery, NY, USA
1966 Whitney Annual (now Biennial), NY, USA
1965 Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, USA
1963 The Museum of Modern Art, NY, USA
1963 Sao Paolo Biennial, Brasil
1962 Cordier & Ekstrom, NY, USA
1962 Whitney Annual (now Biennial), NY, USA
1961 Guggenheim Museum, NY, USA
Selected collections
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, NY, USA
Boca Raton Museum of Art, Florida, USA
Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC, USA
Nelson A. Rockefeller Art Collection, NY, USA
Hirshhorn Museum, Washington D.C., USA
The Museum of Modern Art, NY, USA
National Museum of Contemporary Art, Athens, Greece
National Gallery of Athens, Greece
Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, USA
Whitney Museum of American Art, USA
Menil Collection, Texas, USA
Museum of Modern Art, NY, USA
Tate Gallery, London, Great Britain
Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam, Netherlands
Collection Herbert Lust, Connecticut, USA
Indianapolis Museum of Art, USA
Macedonian Museum of Contemporary Art, Thessaloniki, Greece
Metternich Sammlung, Germany
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Barbara Rose: Chryssa: Cycladic Books 1957-1962, Greece, 1997
Douglas Schultz: Chryssa. Cityscapes, London, 1990
Douglas Schultz: Chryssa: Urban Icons, Buffalo, 1983
Pierre Restany: Chryssa, New York, 1977
Sam Hunter: Chryssa, New York, 1974
Diane Waldman: Chryssa. Selected Works 1955–1967, New York, 1968