Judith Godwin was born in Suffolk, Virginia, in 1930 to a father who was interested in architecture and landscape gardening. His interests created an environment that inspired and encouraged Judith to pursue painting.[2][3]
She attended Mary Baldwin College in 1948 for two years.[2]
It was there that she met Martha Graham, who performed there in 1950.[2] Godwin transferred to Richmond Professional Institute (RPI), now Virginia Commonwealth University, where she completed her degree in 1952. While there, she studied with Maurice Bond, Jewett Campbell, and Theresa Pollak.[2] At the time, women were required to wear a skirt in the cafeteria; Godwin wore jeans after rushing from a studio class and was reported to the dean of the school, Margaret Johnson, who then met with her and changed the rule to allow women to wear jeans.[2] While at RPI, she was in classes and close friends with Richard Carlyon.[2]
Godwin's first solo exhibition was in 1950 at Mountcastle's in Suffolk, Virginia.[2] At the suggestion of her RPI college instructor Jewett Campbell,[5] she moved to New York City in 1953 to attend the Art Students League and study under Hans Hofmann, who influenced her work heavily.[2][6] She studied with Hofmann in his studio on 8th Street, and noted his wife Miz as another important influence. Godwin said that...
"I think the main thing with Hofmann was that I felt completely free to do whatever I wanted to do."[2] Godwin's notable classmates during this era included Will Barnet, Harry Sternberg, and Vaclav Vytlacil.[2] Godwin credited Hofmann with making her feel at home after moving to New York, as well as with challenging her conservative color palette and technique.[5] Hofmann also helped Godwin move away from the influence of cubism and towards abstract expressionism.[2]
In 1958, James Brooks invited her to participate in the Stable Gallery Invitational Show.[2][7] In the late 1950s, through Kenzo Okada, she met and was invited by Betty Parsons to join her new gallery, Section Eleven, becoming the youngest woman to ever show her work there.[2] At Betty Parsons' show, Godwin met the director for the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, James Johnson Sweeney. He was interested in Godwin, and asked her to send a small collection of her work. He received Abstraction 1954 and Abstraction #15. He enjoyed her work, although at the time he did not add them to the Guggenheim Collection.[8] She shared a studio with Franz Kline.[2] She also met other prominent male artists such as Mark Rothko and Marcel Duchamp.[2]
Her success in mid-century Abstract Expressionism is notable, as there were few women celebrated among a movement associated with well-known male artists such as Jackson Pollock and Willem de Kooning.[9][10] In a 1981 interview, Godwin stated: "when I first went to New York in the early 1950s, there were just a few thousand painters living there... now there are tens of thousands so many people trying to gain notice, its unbelievable how competitive it is...." She credits her professor, Jewett Campbell, with her desire to move to New York City.[5]
In the 1980s she maintained three studios, one in a barn in Connecticut, one in Greenwich Village in New York City, and one in Suffolk, Virginia.[2] In 1999 Godwin was a panelist for "Hans Hofmann as Artist and Teacher" symposium at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City.[2]
Style
Godwin was considered a second-generation abstract expressionist.[2] She practiced a style of painting that emphasized interpretation of experience and emotion through improvisational construction of the work, combining the language of color with gestural movements.[10] Her work was influenced by environmental causes, gardening, modern dance, and Zen. Her passion for the environment was a recurring element in her canvases, although these landscape elements refer to the artist's inner terrain, which often echo the disturbances of external nature.[11] Her early influences arose out of her childhood and having assisted her father with gardening.[2] Soon after moving to New York City, she became friends with Martha Graham through an earlier connection made while still a student at Mary Baldwin College.[2] Graham's performances influenced Godwin, who often incorporated the dancer and choreographer's dynamic gestures into the composition of a painting. Speaking of one such piece, her 9-foot wide diptych The Ring, Godwin said, "I most often begin to paint by envisioning form and space in nature and then interpret my ideas and feelings into planes of color on the canvas. When I recognize an emerging form, I respond intuitively by evolving complementary sub-forms in colors and applications which feel supportive and foster development. In studying color and its behavior, I have learned to trust my intuition."[3] Another of her paintings is titled Ode to Martha Graham.
Early in her career Godwin employed a strong, aggressive style in order to silence the male critics who dismissed women's contributions to the art world at that time. Over the course of her career her color palette evolved, first softening and later becoming bright again.[12]
In the 1990s, Godwin began incorporating subtle assemblage to her canvases. Of this later direction she said, "I think it came out of needing to add something to the surfaces of my paintings...I don't want them to jump out."
In a statement made for "Celebration of Women in the Arts," at Northern Michigan University in 1978, Godwin said ..."The act of painting is for me, as a woman, an act of freedom, and a realization that images generated by the female experience can be a powerful and creative expression for all humanity. My paintings are personal statements - extensions of myself. I take a truth, an intimate emotion, a question, an answer – and paint it. It is natural for me to mediate upon reality rather than on the romantic, and yet my work often results in a mixture of both"[2]
Awards and honors
1989 Honorary Doctor of Fine Arts, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA[2]
Professional Achievement Alumni Award from the School of the Arts, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA[2]
2002 Career achievement award from Mary Baldwin College, Staunton, VA[2]
Honorary Doctor of Humane Letters Degree from Mary Baldwin College, Staunton, VA[2]
Personal life
Her family home in Suffolk was called "Whitehall" and her ancestry goes back to the first settlers in the Virginia Colony.[2] Godwin's mother was Judith Brewer Godwin who was associated with the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities and a one-time president of the Garden Club of Virginia.[2] Godwin's father was Frank Whitney Godwin, a dentist and decorated veteran of World War I who later became a national vice commander of the American Legion, and was additionally an amateur architect.[2]
During the 1950s she embraced the Zen idea, living with few objects in a modest apartment in Greenwich Village.[2] During the 1950s and 1960s she took on jobs restoring houses and working as an apprentice to a plasterer and mason, as well as some interior design work and fabric design.[2] In 1963 Godwin purchased a brownstone in Greenwich Village previously owned by Franz Kline.[2]
During the 1980s she picketed against an annual furriers convention in New York.[2]
^ abMarter, Joan, Catalog- Judith Godwin: Color and Movement, Rutgers University Mary H. Dana Women Artists Series, Mabel Smith Douglass Library, 2001.
^"Godwin shows in Richmond". suffolknewsherald.com. September 18, 2012. Retrieved September 20, 2012.
^Gibson, Ann (1997). "Judith Godwin: Style and Grace"(PDF). Judith Godwin, Style and Grace (Roanoke Virginia: Art Museum of Western Virginia: 13–29. Retrieved 19 March 2019.
^"Expressing Herself", Richmond Magazine, September 2012.
^ abPatrick McCracken. "Judith Godwin" Amarillo Museum of Art, 1995–1996.
^Lowery Stokes Sims. "Judith Godwin: Objectified Gesture", reprinted from Judith Godwin: Early Abstractions (San Antonio: McNay Art Museum, 2008), 10–14.