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Artist: Ross Bleckner
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  • About
  • Items (65)
  • Auctions (43)

Ross Bleckner
b. 1949

Ross Bleckner deftly combines abstraction and figuration to produce paintings that function as memento mori. Working in the aesthetic traditions of the Romantics, with a concern for contemporary issues, Bleckner's paintings are suffused with sentiment, longing, and ethereal beauty.

It is important that painting connect to ideas, and ultimately these ideas can affect people. There is something in my work that touches feelings and ideas that have been latent.

Ross Bleckner

Ross Bleckner b. 1949

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Ross Bleckner was born in 1949 in New York and grew up on Long Island. Bleckner attended New York University, studying under artists such as Sol LeWitt and Chuck Close and graduated in 1971. He went on to study at the California Institute of the Arts, earning an MFA in 1973. Upon moving back to New York in 1974, he purchased a building in Tribeca, where he lived and worked, and also rented three floors to the artist Julian Schnabel and the ground floor to the famed Mudd Club, a gathering place for the musicians and artists of the downtown scene. In 1979, after several well-received shows of his early abstracted geometric paintings, he began being represented by Mary Boone Gallery, home to many of the New York City “art stars” of the coming decade.

Bleckner began creating the work he is most known for in the mid-1980s, partly as a response to the AIDS crisis. A departure from his earlier nonrepresentational works, these large paintings depict urns, ornamental gates, chandeliers, flowers and fruit, floating, in a radiant glow, against dark backgrounds. These works are rooted in a sense of loss, dislocation and sentiment but also employ his earlier explorations of linear geometry, rendering the hard-edged lines of Op Art decorative and expressive. Bleckner calls the light in these paintings “light from history,” citing Romantics such as William Blake and J.M.W. Turner among his inspirations. As a reaction to the cool detachment of the prevailing styles of the previous generation, Bleckner turned to emotional engagement, calling for artists to “reconcile the object with what we in fact do know and feel…take the emphasis off the continuous repetition of autonomous moments in the world of feeling and root these moments in a larger psychological, social and political reality.” From this mentality came deeply moving works that confronted the turbulence of the times with vulnerability, as well as reinvigorated formalist abstraction with a personal, penetrating approach.

In the late 1980s, the night sky began figuring predominantly in Bleckner’s work, both as place and non-place—enveloping atmospheric depictions of a physical phenomenon that we can often only observe and grasp through abstraction. Much like the floating objects of his earlier works, bathed in an otherworldly light, these sky paintings provoke a sense of a yearning melancholy.

Bleckner’s first solo exhibition was held at the San Francisco Museum of Art in 1988 and a mid-career retrospective was presented at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York in 1995. His paintings are widely held in collections such as The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. and Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, among others. In addition to his paintings, Bleckner has also become involved in humanitarian efforts and was appointed as a United Nations Goodwill Ambassador in 2012, visiting refugee camps of abducted children in Uganda, making art with them and raising awareness and funds to support them. He continues to live and work in New York City.

Upcoming Lots Ross Bleckner

Ross Bleckner, Untitled

101 Ross Bleckner

Untitled

estimate: $10,000–15,000

starting bid: $6,000

Post War & Contemporary Art, 25 Jun 2025
view on LAMA

Auction Results Ross Bleckner

Ross Bleckner, Flower Power Painting

Ross Bleckner

Flower Power Painting

estimate: $30,000–50,000

result: $33,020

Ross Bleckner, Bird's Eye View II

Ross Bleckner

Bird's Eye View II

estimate: $20,000–30,000

result: $27,940

Ross Bleckner, Untitled (triptych)

Ross Bleckner

Untitled (triptych)

estimate: $15,000–20,000

result: $21,420

Ross Bleckner, HIM

Ross Bleckner

HIM

estimate: $20,000–30,000

result: $20,000

Ross Bleckner’s significance lies not only in his passionate feelings about certain issues facing our society, but also in his belief that art can communicate and change how we feel and act…its ability to heal society’s wounds. Although Bleckner’s paintings have continually centered on themes of mortality, he is not a pessimistic artist, but is, instead, a hopeful one.

Dean Sobel, Curator

Additional Resources

Ross Bleckner artist website
500 Words
Ross Bleckner: Remember Me documentary
Smithsonian Archives of American Art Oral History with Ross Bleckner
 

To learn more about a work by Ross Bleckner in your collection, contact our specialists.

In order for me to express what I want to express, [the paintings] have to be beautiful, they have to be seductive. But they also have to be a bit repellant, and have certain elements that become confusing within them.

Ross Bleckner

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