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Mary Frank
Mary Frank
from Wikipedia

Mary Frank (née Lockspeiser; born 4 February 1933) is a British and American visual artist who works as a sculptor, painter, printmaker, draftswoman, and illustrator.

Key Information

Biography

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Untitled (Prone Man, Two Trees) by Mary Frank

Frank was born in London, the only child of Eleanore Lockspeiser (née Weinstein; 1900–1986), an American painter, and Edward Lockspeiser (1905–1973), an English musicologist and art critic.[1]

In 1939, at the beginning of World War II, she left London for a series of boarding schools and then was sent in 1940 to live with her maternal grandparents, Gregory and Eugenie Weinstein in Brooklyn, New York.[2][3]

She studied modern dance with Martha Graham from 1945 to 1950 and was admitted to the High School of Music & Art in New York in 1947. In 1949, she transferred to the Professional Children's School, where she majored in dance. While in high school, she met Robert Frank, a Swiss photographer, whom she married in 1950. About this time she studied wood carving at Alfred van Loen's studio. She also studied drawing with Max Beckmann at the Brooklyn Museum Art School in New York and briefly with Hans Hofmann in 1951 and 1954.[citation needed]

By this time she had two children: Pablo (named after Picasso; born 7 February 1951) and Andrea (born 21 April 1953). After her husband, Robert Frank, gained a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1955 she travelled with him and the children the following two years across the United States.[4]

Frank first exhibited her drawings in 1958 at the Poindexter Gallery in New York City. In 1969, she began her relationship with the Zabriskie Gallery in New York. Inspired by the sculpture and pottery of Margaret Ponce Israel, she began working in clay. It was also in that year that Frank illustrated the children's book, Buddha, by the author Joan Lebols Cohen.[5]

In 1969, she divorced Robert Frank. On 28 December 1974, her 21-year-old daughter, Andrea, was killed in a plane crash in Guatemala.[6] About a year later her son Pablo, who suffered from schizophrenia, developed Hodgkin's lymphoma. He died on 11 November 1994, aged 43, at Lehigh Valley Hospital, Salisbury Township, Pennsylvania.[7]

Mary Frank currently lives and works in Lake Hill, New York and in New York City. Since 1995, she has been married to Leo Treitler, a pianist and music scholar.[8]

Frank's career spans five decades. She is largely self-taught and had no formal training as a sculptor. She was elected to the American Academy and Institute of Arts and Letters in 1984, the recipient of numerous awards and honors including two Guggenheim Foundation Fellowship Awards in 1973 and 1983, the Lee Krasner Award of the Pollock-Krasner Foundation in 1993 and the Joan Mitchell Grant Award in 1995. In 1990 she was elected into the National Academy of Design as an Associate member, and became a full Academician in 1994. Working as a professor at Bard College (Annandale-on-Hudson, New York), Frank was honored with the title of Milton Avery Chair, Distinguished Professor.[9]

Currently, she has works included in the permanent collections of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Minneapolis Institute of Art,[10][11] the Whitney Museum of American Art,[12] the Museum of Modern Art,[13] the Brooklyn Museum,[14] the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art,[15] the National Museum of American Art at the Smithsonian Institution,[16] the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts,[17] the Princeton University Art Museum,[18] the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art,[19] the Grounds For Sculpture,[20] the Weatherspoon Art Museum,[21] the Everson Museum of Art,[22] the University of Michigan Museum of Art,[23] the Library of Congress, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Museum of Art at Yale University, the Jewish Museum, the Whitney Museum, Boston's Museum of Fine Arts, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco.[citation needed]

Works

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  • Persephone (Ceramic sculpture, 1989)[24]
  • Messenger (Cast bronze sculpture, 1991–92)[24]
  • What Color Lament? (Oil and collage on board, 1991–93)[24]
  • Knowing by Heart (closed) (Acrylic, oil, and collage on panel, 1997)[24]
  • Knowing by Heart (open) (Acrylic, oil, and collage on panel, 1997)[24]
  • This is the Remembering (closed) (Oil and acrylic on panel, 1996–97)[24]
  • This is the Remembering (open) (Oil and acrylic on panel, 1996–97)[24]
  • Migration (closed) (Acrylic, oil, and collage on panel, 1998–99)[24]
  • Migration (open) (Acrylic, oil, and collage on panel, 1998–99)[24]
  • Where or When? (closed) (Acrylic, oil and collage on panel, 1998–99)[24]
  • Where or When? (open) (Acrylic, oil and collage on panel, 1998–99)[24]
  • Ballad (closed) (Acrylic, oil and collage on panel, 1997–99)[24]
  • Ballad (open) (Acrylic, oil and collage on panel, 1997–99)[24]
  • Creature (Oil on panel, 1999)[24]

Bibliography

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See also

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References

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Sources

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Mary Frank is a British-born American sculptor and painter known for her expressive figurative works that explore themes of mythology, nature, the human form, and personal experience across sculpture, painting, printmaking, photography, and collage. Born in London in 1933, she immigrated to the United States with her mother at age seven in 1940, initially studying dance with Martha Graham before turning to visual art. She began carving wood sculptures in the early 1950s after studying drawing with Hans Hofmann, later gaining prominence for her large, multi-part clay figures in the late 1960s and 1970s, and has continued to innovate in diverse media throughout her more than fifty-year career. Her work often features dynamic, fragmented forms of women, animals, and elemental landscapes, drawing on influences from dance, ancient mythology, and the natural world, while addressing themes of transformation, loss, and resilience. She has described art's purpose as "to comfort the dead, to awaken the living…to give courage, and never be afraid of tenderness or the absurd and to gather joy." Frank's pieces are held in prominent collections including the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, Guggenheim Museum, and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, among others. She has received significant recognition, including two Guggenheim Fellowships, a grant from the National Council on the Arts, the Joan Mitchell Award, and the Brandeis University Creative Arts Award, and has exhibited widely at institutions such as the DeCordova Museum, National Gallery of Art, Art Institute of Chicago, and Philadelphia Museum of Art. In addition to her studio practice, she has designed theater sets and illustrated children's books. Frank lives and works in upstate New York.

Early Life

Birth and Family Background

Mary Frank was born Mary Lockspeiser on February 4, 1933, in London, England. She was the only child of Eleanore Lockspeiser (née Weinstein; 1900–1986), an American-born painter, and Edward Lockspeiser (1905–1973), a prominent English musicologist and art critic. Her family's deep involvement in the arts proved formative, as her mother emphasized that “art was the only important thing in our household,” while Frank herself has stated that she was “brought up to be an artist.” This background in painting and music criticism from her parents shaped her early orientation toward creative expression.

Relocation to the United States

Mary Frank was evacuated from London in 1939, at the age of six, following Britain's declaration of war on Germany at the onset of World War II. She was placed in multiple church boarding schools in the English countryside during this wartime displacement. This period of separation from her family heightened her awareness of being an outsider, as her household was both atheist and Jewish. Prior to June 1940, when her family's home in London was bombed and her mother’s paintings were destroyed, Frank and her mother relocated to the United States. They settled in Brooklyn, New York, to live with her maternal grandparents, Gregory and Eugenie Weinstein. This marked Frank's permanent relocation to the United States with her family in 1940. Her father remained in London to serve in the fire service during the war, and the family's wartime separation contributed to her parents' eventual divorce.

Education and Early Training

Mary Frank's early artistic training in New York emphasized modern dance before shifting toward visual arts through a series of informal and brief studies. She studied modern dance with Martha Graham from 1945 to 1950. This training shaped her lifelong interest in movement and the expressive potential of the human body. In 1947 she was admitted to the High School of Music & Art in Manhattan, and in 1949 she transferred to the Professional Children's School, where she majored in dance. Her visual arts education began with wood carving in the studio of Dutch sculptor Alfred van Loen around 1950, during her high school years; van Loen allowed her to use his tools to create small pieces but did not provide formal instruction. She studied drawing with Max Beckmann at the Brooklyn Museum Art School around the time of his death in 1950. She also had brief periods of study with Hans Hofmann in 1951 and 1954, focusing on drawing. Frank was largely self-taught as a sculptor and held no formal degree in sculpture.

Artistic Career

Early Exhibitions and Drawings

Mary Frank first exhibited her drawings in 1958 at the Poindexter Gallery in New York, marking her entry into the professional art world. This debut focused on her work as a draftswoman, showcasing her skill in line and composition. She earned early recognition for her abilities in drawing and printmaking, establishing herself as an accomplished artist in these media during her initial years in New York. Her early drawings were influenced by her training with Hans Hofmann. In 1969, Frank began a long-term relationship with the Zabriskie Gallery in New York, which became her primary representative and hosted numerous exhibitions of her work over the following decades. That same year, she illustrated the children's book Buddha by Joan Lebold Cohen, demonstrating her versatility in illustration.

Transition to Sculpture and Major Media

In the late 1960s, Mary Frank shifted her primary focus to sculpture, beginning to work in clay in 1969 after being inspired by the sculpture and pottery of Margaret Ponce Israel. This change led her to develop large-scale, multi-part figurative ceramic sculptures that emphasized emotional intensity, sensual beauty, and poetic metaphors, often described as earthy and erotic. During this period she also created figurative works in bronze, expanding her sculptural practice across materials while maintaining a commitment to direct expression and the human form. Frank further broadened her practice to include other major media, such as oil and acrylic painting, collage on panel, and printmaking, allowing her to explore recurring imagery and intense emotions across disciplines. From the mid-1980s onward, painting increasingly became her primary medium, driven by a greater need to incorporate color into her work. Her career as an exhibiting artist has spanned more than five decades, beginning in the late 1950s and continuing with regular solo exhibitions into the 2020s, reflecting her fluid movement across sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking, and other forms.

Notable Works and Themes

Mary Frank's notable works from the late 1980s and 1990s reflect her shift toward complex multi-panel paintings and mixed-media pieces, which allowed her to explore deeper emotional and spiritual narratives. Recurring themes in her art include mythology, loss, the human figure, and nature, often expressed through a private mythology that resonates universally. Her imagery functions as a personal alphabet, combining elements to evoke intense feelings of grief, love, sorrow, ecstasy, mourning, and exultation. Frank's work addresses the pain and mystery of human embeddedness in the natural world, confronting large subjects such as death, chaos, loss, and fragmentation without offering easy redemption. Among her notable works are Persephone (ceramic, 1989), which draws on mythological subjects, and Messenger (cast bronze, 1991–92), exemplifying her continued engagement with sculpture alongside emerging media. What Color Lament? (oil/collage, 1991–93) is a large triptych that employs expressive color and layered composition to convey emotive depth, with closed outer panels contrasting the revealed interior imagery. Knowing by Heart (closed/open, acrylic/oil/collage, 1997), This is the Remembering (closed/open, oil/acrylic, 1996–97), and Migration (closed/open, acrylic/oil/collage, 1998–99) further demonstrate her use of multi-panel formats to engage viewers physically and emotionally, blending figurative motifs with landscapes and creatures to explore themes of memory, transformation, and communion with nature. These works highlight her ability to render the human figure perceptively within poetic and spiritual contexts, retaining the textural sensitivity from her earlier ceramic practice.

Teaching and Academic Positions

Mary Frank has held prominent teaching and academic positions in the field of visual arts. She served as a professor at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. In 1992, Frank was honored with the Milton Avery Chair as Distinguished Professor at Bard College. She also received teaching recognition at the New York Academy of Art in 1993.

Personal Life

Marriage to Robert Frank and Family

Mary Frank married the Swiss photographer Robert Frank in 1950. The couple, both practicing artists, lived in New York City, where Mary continued her creative work while raising a family. Their son Pablo was born on February 7, 1951, followed by their daughter Andrea on April 21, 1953. The marriage ended in divorce in 1969. The family endured profound tragedies in the following years. Andrea died on December 28, 1974, at age 21 in a plane crash in Guatemala. Pablo died on November 11, 1994, at age 43 from complications related to Hodgkin's lymphoma and schizophrenia. These losses deeply marked Mary Frank's personal life and influenced her artistic expression in subsequent decades.

Later Marriage and Residence

Mary Frank married the pianist and music scholar Leo Treitler in June 1995. The marriage remains ongoing, with the couple sharing homes and studios where Frank continues her creative work. She lives and works in Lake Hill, New York, and in New York City. Her Lake Hill residence, where she spends significant time, has served as a key site for her art-making since she first acquired property in the area in the 1970s, though her dual locations support her ongoing practice in both rural and urban environments.

Awards and Recognition

Legacy

Permanent Collections

Mary Frank's works are included in the permanent collections of several major American museums. These include the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C., which holds multiple examples of her sculpture and other media, the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York with five works in its collection, and the Brooklyn Museum with nine collection objects. Additional institutions featuring her work in their permanent collections are the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C., the Art Institute of Chicago, Yale University Art Gallery in New Haven, the Jewish Museum in New York, the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston, and the Newark Museum. These holdings span her career across sculpture, painting, drawing, and printmaking.

Critical Reception and Influence

Mary Frank has garnered critical acclaim for her figurative sculptures and paintings that powerfully convey intense emotional states such as grief, love, sorrow, ecstasy, mourning, and exultation, often through a personal visual alphabet of recurring images that explore the human condition, loss, memory, transformation, and the natural world. Her work draws on mythological tropes, elemental forms, and expressionistic figures to create oblique narratives that engage the body and evoke profound empathy, while remaining rooted in direct and honest expression that begins in abstraction and evolves into charged emotional atmospheres. Critics have noted the emotional expressiveness of her figurative approach, which consistently addresses social justice and the preservation of nature, positioning her as an independent artist who has never compromised her vision across shifting art-world trends. Spanning more than six decades of practice from the early 1950s onward, Frank's sustained exhibition history—including major retrospectives such as The Observing Heart at the Samuel Dorsky Museum of Art in 2022—underscores her enduring influence on contemporary figurative art through cross-disciplinary work in sculpture, painting, drawing, printmaking, and photography. Her contributions have moved viewers deeply, eliciting rapturous praise and strong emotional responses that reflect the integration of personal experience into her art. Frank has had limited involvement in media portrayals, with the primary documentary being Visions of Mary Frank (2014), directed by longtime friend and filmmaker John Cohen, which provides an intimate portrait of her studio life, activism, and presence in the New York arts community since the 1950s. She also appeared briefly as herself in the 1998 episode "A Matter of Spirit" of the series Art/New York.

References

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