Heather Gaudio Fine Art is pleased to announce an exhibition of works by Esteban Vicente (1903 – 2001), one of the leading abstract expressionist painters and a founding member of the New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting and Sculpture. The show is presented in collaboration with The Harriet and Esteban Vicente Foundation courtesy of Ameringer | McEnery | Yohe, New York, NY and features Vicente’s ethereal Garden Paintings whose subject matter was inspired by the carefully cultivated garden at his Bridgehampton, Long Island home.
Roberta Smith writes of Vicente’s work – “His talent lay in his ability to borrow liberally and synthesize confidently, with elegant color combinations, bold scale and, in particular, an unerring sense of abstract composition that reflected his late-blooming grasp of Cubist structure.” These colorful abstractions will be paired with the striking sculpture of artist Paul Bloch. Vicente + Bloch opens on Thursday, March 27 and will be on view through May 31.
Since he began painting in his home province of Segovia, Spain, Esteban Vicente almost always used color as a way of capturing the quintessence of the place in which he lived and worked. But it was not until moving to America in 1936 that he gradually shifted away from the dark tones often associated with Spain and Spanish painting to a brighter, more vibrant palette. The Garden Paintings, a collection of abstract works from the 90’s, is a testimonial to his late painting and the chemistry of color that was its hallmark. As Vicente entered the final years of his long and accomplished life, he drew inspiration from the ambrosial hues of his garden in Bridgehampton, close at hand and not more than a few steps from his studio door.
Barbara Toll writes “This is not Giverny, but it is every bit as much a labor of love. Vicente’s garden did not include exotic plants, waterways and bridges. He used cottage-garden flowers available in every local plant shop. But he used them with abandon and to great effect. Esteban Vicente created a garden with the colors he wanted to paint. And with the garden as inspiration, he used those colors to paint ethereal canvases.”
Vicente’s work may be found in numerous museum collections including the Museum of Modern Art, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum and the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. In Spain, his work is included in the Institut Valencià D’Art Modern (IVAM), Valencià; the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid; and the Museo de Arte Contemporáneo Esteban Vicente, Segovia, a museum established by the Spanish Government in Vicente’s honor in 1998.
“To me painting has to be done with your mind as clear as possible. It is necessary to put away any aspects of violence, or action; on the contrary, to be in control all the time until you lose your sense of consciousness.” Esteban Vicente
Heather Gaudio Fine Art
21 South Avenue, New Canaan; 203-801-9590





