
"I arrive at my imagery through the use of loose rules that guide the series and forms I work with. These limitations create a framework in which the myriad forms unfold. Materiality is important, drives the process, activates the senses and allows the viewer to engage the work. Transformation is created through the use of repetition and simple forms assume a new complexity. The viewer is presented with the endless possibilities of a defined pattern and participates in the thought process of the work and it’s underlying intelligence." Mary Judge 2007
Mary Judge is an artist who lives and works in New York and Italy. She is best known for her "spolvero" drawings (dust in Italian) which she first exhibited at
The Drawing Center in NY. She is Assoc. Professor of Drawing at Parsons the New School for Design and is represented by Metaphor Contemporary Art in Brooklyn NY. Her works can be seen in the collections of The British Museum and The Victoria & Albert Museum in London, The Philadelphia Museum of Art, and The Fogg Museum among others.
www.maryjudge.com
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