Amalie Rothschild
(1916-2001) was a painter, sculptor and printmaker who lived
and worked her entire life in Baltimore, Maryland and made
enormous contributions to the cultural and artistic
environment of the city and local area. She is best known as
an abstract, geometric painter and sculptor working in
materials including plexiglas, aluminum, bronze, bark,
handmade cast paper, and particle board, as well as oil and
acrylic, watercolor and drawing. Her work, despite its
abstract geometric appearance, was frequently
self-referential and often dealt with the issues of
balancing the duties of wife and mother with the strivings
of the artist, while at the same time paying homage to
historical themes. During the 1960s Rothschild broke out
from her often hard-edged geometric paintings into sculpture
and created more than 325 works, from large outdoor and
sometimes monumental pieces, to elegant, table-top scale
spatial explorations of balance that explored the contrast
between the solid and the void, to linear pieces that have
been described as "drawing in space." Beginning in the
feminist 1970's Amalie Rothschild created her most
innovative work, a series she referred to as Vestments.
Constructed of sculptural materials, including aluminum and
translucent plexiglas which simulate colorful evocations of
stained glass, as well as cord and handmade chain links, the
non-wearable forms are designed to hang and be seen from
front and back, more in the manner of textiles than
sculptures. In addition, throughout her life she drew almost
every day, creating hundreds of works on paper. When she
died she left a vast oeuvre comprising approximately 1400
fully realized works in all media, some 270 of which are in
private collections and museums.
Amalie R. Rothschild, the photographer and filmmaker,
is her daughter and can be contacted at:
agora@amalierrothschild.com
Amalie R. Rothschild, the photographer and filmmaker,
is her daughter and can be contacted at:
agora@amalierrothschild.com
The
artist in her studio in 1988