Born Lenore Knaster, Lee Lozano attended the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1950s and there met her future husband, Adrian Lozano. She went to New York and had some modest recognition, but spent... Read full biography
Born Lenore Knaster, Lee Lozano attended the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1950s and there met her future husband, Adrian Lozano. She went to New York and had some modest recognition, but spent much of her energy on marijuana and cheap booze. She was very troubled psychologically and the last... Read full biography
Born Lenore Knaster, Lee Lozano attended the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1950s and there met her future husband, Adrian Lozano. She went to New York and had some modest recognition, but spent much of her energy on marijuana and cheap booze. She was very troubled psychologically and the last twenty years of her life refused to speak to women. At first her work was cartoonish and overtly sexual, but by the mid 60s became more abstract and formal. Some of her works were tool paintings,... Read full biography
Born Lenore Knaster, Lee Lozano attended the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1950s and there met her future husband, Adrian Lozano. She went to New York and had some modest recognition, but spent much of her energy on marijuana and cheap booze. She was very troubled psychologically and the last twenty years of her life refused to speak to women. At first her work was cartoonish and overtly sexual, but by the mid 60s became more abstract and formal. Some of her works were tool paintings, depicting screws, pipes and wrenches in sombre colors. Source: ArtForum, October, 2001, Katy Siegel. Lee Lozano, 68, Conceptual Artist Who Boycotted Women for Years. by Roberta Smith. Lee Lozano, an eccentric artist who pursued Conceptual Art and painting... Read full biography
Born Lenore Knaster, Lee Lozano attended the Art Institute of Chicago in the 1950s and there met her future husband, Adrian Lozano. She went to New York and had some modest recognition, but spent much of her energy on marijuana and cheap booze. She was very troubled psychologically and the last twenty years of her life refused to speak to women. At first her work was cartoonish and overtly sexual, but by the mid 60s became more abstract and formal. Some of her works were tool paintings, depicting screws, pipes and wrenches in sombre colors. Source: ArtForum, October, 2001, Katy Siegel. Lee Lozano, 68, Conceptual Artist Who Boycotted Women for Years. by Roberta Smith. Lee Lozano, an eccentric artist who pursued Conceptual Art and painting in the 1960's and then left the New York art world for self-imposed exile that included an embargo on contact with other wo... Read full biography
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