Elena Sisto
Elena Sisto (born 1952, Boston, MA) is an American painter based in New York.
Her work is influenced by Philip Guston, Henri Matisse, Pierre Bonnard, and other modernist artists. In a recent essay.,[1] critic and former Museum of Modern Art curator Robert Storr compared Sisto to contemporary artists Carroll Dunham and Dana Schutz.
She received her BA in Art from Brown University and Rhode Island School of Design in 1977, and studied with Nicholas Carone at the New York Studio School, the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and Yale Norfolk. She is a 2013 recipient of the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship[2] (see also: List of Guggenheim Fellowships awarded in 2013), two National Endowment for the Arts Visual Artist’s Fellowships (1983–84 and 1989–90), the Inglis Griswold Nelson Prize from the National Academy Museum and School (2008), and fellowships from the Hand Hollow Foundation (1995), Peter S. Reed Foundation (1999), Yaddo (2007), The Fine Arts Work Center (1996) and the Millay Colony (1987).[3]
Sisto has had solo shows at the Katzen Museum of Art at American University,[4] the Maier Museum, The Greenville County Museum, and the Miami Dade Museum of Art + Design.[5] She has been included in numerous museum exhibitions, including the 43rd Biennial of Contemporary American Painting at The Corcoran Gallery in Washington, DC, the Wexner Center for the Arts, Katonah Museum of Art, the Hunterdown Museum of Art, and the Weatherspoon Gallery.
Sisto’s work has been the subject of essays by Stephen Westfall,[6] Robert Storr,[1] Debra Bricker Balken, Carol Kino, Hearne Pardee[7] and inspired the fiction piece Pan’s Fair Throng by novelist Rick Moody.[8] Reviews of Sisto’s exhibitions have appeared in publications including the New York Times,[9][10][11] New Yorker magazine,[12] Artcritical,[13] Artforum, Art in America,[5] Art News, Arts, The Brooklyn Rail,[14][15] Los Angeles Times, and Modern Painters.
Her work is currently represented by Lori Bookstein Fine Art in New York City. She has been represented in the past by Jackie Littlejohn Gallery, Germans Van Eck Gallery, Damon Brandt Gallery, and Vanderwoude Tannenbaum Gallery[16]
References
- 1 2 Catalogue essay: Robert Storr on Elena Sisto - Two Coats of Paint
- ↑ John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Elena Sisto
- ↑ Elena Sisto - Artists - Lori Bookstein Fine Art
- ↑ Elena Sisto: New Work | American University Museum, Katzen Arts Center, Washington, DC
- 1 2 Becoming Adults: The Paintings of Elena Sisto - Interviews - Art in America
- ↑ http://www.elenasisto.com/pages/essay.html
- ↑ ELENA SISTO Afternoons | The Brooklyn Rail
- ↑ https://www.jstor.org/stable/24516398?seq=1#page_scan_tab_contents
- ↑ Art in Review - NYTimes.com
- ↑ Art in Review - NYTimes.com
- ↑ Art in Review - NYTimes.com
- ↑ Elena Sisto - The New Yorker
- ↑ Portrait of the Artist as a Young Woman: Elena Sisto at Lori Bookstein - artcritical artcritical
- ↑ ELENA SISTO Between Silver Light and Orange Shadow | The Brooklyn Rail
- ↑ ELENA SISTO Afternoons | The Brooklyn Rail
- ↑ Elena Sisto - BFA Fine Arts Department - SVA NYC