| Tobi
Kahn, American (1952 - )
Tobi Kahn is internationally acclaimed as a painter and sculptor.
His work has been shown in over 40 solo exhibitions and over
60 museum and group shows since he was selected as one of nine
artists to be included in the 1985 Guggenheim Museum exhibition,
New Horizons in American Art. Kahn's paintings and sculpture
have been the subject of an extensive bibliography in art magazines,
catalogues and newspapers since the early 1980s.
A museum exhibition of over a decade of his work, Tobi Kahn:
Metamorphoses, curated by Peter Selz, traveled to eight museums
from 1997 through 1999, including the Weatherspoon Museum,
Greensboro, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. An 84-page
illustrated catalogue of the exhibition includes essays by
Dore Ashton, Michael Brenson and Peter Selz (University of
Washington Press).
Works by Kahn are in the collections of major institutions
throughout the United States, including the Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum, NY; Jewish Museum, NY; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston,
TX; Weatherspoon Art Gallery, Greensboro, NC; Edwin A. Ulrich
Museum of Art, Wichita, KS; Colby College Museum of Art, Waterville,
ME; Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University, Waltham, MA; and
Skirball Cultural Center, Los Angeles, CA. Corporate collections
include Swiss Bank Corporation, NY; Chase Manhattan Bank, NY;
Prudential Insurance, NY; Dreyfus Corporation, NY; Salomon
Brothers, NY; Skadden, Arps, Slate, Neagher & Flom, NY;
Exxon Corporation, Miami, FL; and Fidelity Investments, Boston,
MA.
Kahn's commissioned outdoor sculpture includes Shalev, for
Jane Owen and the Robert Lee Blaffer Trust, New Harmony, IN;
and two Holocaust memorial gardens, in Tenafly, NJ, and La
Jolla, CA. His commissioned installations include Eyda, seven
paintings for Mitchell and Company, Boston, MA; and The Twelve
Tribes and Creation of the World, for the Jewish Family Congregation,
South Salem, NY, through a Nathan Cummings Foundation grant;
as well as numerous private commissions.
In March 1999, Avoda: Objects of the Spirit, an exhibition
of Kahn's ceremonial objects curated by Laura Kruger, opened
at Hebrew Union College, NY, and will travel for five years.
Other Judaica commissions include the Museum of Jewish Heritage,
Battery Park City, NY.
In December 1999, Kahn designed an installation of nine "Sky
and Water" paintings for the Albright-Knox Art Gallery's
Landscape at the Millennium exhibition, curated by Douglas
Dreishpoon.
In November 2000, a solo exhibition of Kahn's paintings and
works on paper, curated by Mark White, opened at the Edwin
A. Ulrich Museum of Art. It will travel to four other venues.
The exhibition will include a catalogue, Metaphor and Transport:
Tobi Kahn and the Aerial View.
In May 2000, Kahn received the Outstanding Achievement Award
in fine art as an alumnus of Pratt Institute. In March 2001,
Heads, a solo exhibition of Kahn's early work, opened at Pratt,
curated by Peter Selz and accompanied by a catalogue.
Kahn's handmade toys have been included in museum shows across
the country. He has also designed sculpture sets for theater
productions, including Jonah and The Song of Songs, both by
composer Elizabeth Swados, and for work by choreographers Gus
Solomons and Muna Tseng.
In November 2001, a meditative room created by Kahn was inaugurated
as a permanent installation at the HealthCare Chaplaincy in
New York City.
In November 2002, a solo exhibition of Kahn's paintings based
on creation, will open at the Yeshiva University Museum in
Chelsea, New York. In May 2003, an exhibition of Kahn's "Sky
and Water" paintings opens at the Neuberger Museum in
Purchase, New York.
Kahn is currently creating a chapel commissioned by Jane Owen
and the Blaffer Trust to be constructed in New Harmony, Indiana.
He is working with the architect to design the building, which
will consist of one large room of his murals and two side chapels
of his paintings and sculpture.
To Artist Showroom
|