Martha Jackson (néeKellogg; January 17, 1907 – July 4, 1969) was an American art dealer, gallery owner, and collector. Her New York City based Martha Jackson Gallery, founded in 1953, was groundbreaking in its representation of women and international artists, and in establishing the op art movement.
Biography
Jackson was born Martha Kellogg on January 17, 1907, in Buffalo, New York. She was born into two prominent Buffalo families, the daughter of Cyrena (née Case; 1884-1931) and Howard Kellogg (1881-1969).[1][2] She had two brothers, Spencer Kellogg II and Howard Kellogg, Jr.[1][3] Jackson's mother's family founded and operated W. A. Case & Son Manufacturing Company which was eventually purchased in 1952 by what is now Covanta. Jackson's father was president of Spencer Kellogg & Sons, Inc., a linseed oil firm founded by his father, which became a division of Textron in 1961.[1][3]
Jackson was married to John Anderson of Buffalo with whom she had two children, Cyrena (1934-1939) and David (1935-2009).[4][8] The marriage ended in divorce.[4] She was married a second time to attorney David Jackson of Buffalo from 1940 to 1949.[4][6]
The gallery was the first in the US to exhibit Gutai, the Japanese postwar collective, and also one of the first to represent women.[12] In addition to representing Louise Nevelson, Jackson worked with Alma Thomas[12]— who became the first African American woman to mount a solo show at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York —[13]Lee Krasner, Marisol (Escobar), Barbara Hepworth, and Grace Hartigan.[7] She also championed American artist from beyond the New York region, like Morris Louis in the 1950s, and Ed McGowin in the 1960s.[7]
In the summer of 1960[14] Jackson mounted the proto-Pop[15]New Forms — New Media exhibition, a subversive[14] show featuring 72 works[16] of art in the Dadaist tradition.[14] The crowded exhibition, dubbed "wild and wacky" and "Neo-Dada" by John Canday in the New York Times,[16] featured both historic and contemporary examples of mixed-media assemblage, high and low found objects[14] that were both groundbreaking yet easily mistaken as household junk.[15][17] The exhibition included works by Hans Arp, Kurt Schwitters, Alexander Calder, Joseph Cornell, Jean Dubuffet, Robert Mallary, Wilfred Zogbaum, Robert Rauschenberg[14]Bruce Conner, Zoltán Kemény, and Enrico Donatis[16] that pushed against the social limits of art; interactive artworks that invited audience participation and blurred the boundaries between painting and sculpture.[14] In the fall of 1960, the gallery launched a second installment of the exhibit, New Forms New Media II, which ran from September 22- October 22.[15][17]
In 1961 Jackson opened Environments, Situations, Spaces, a follow-up to the New Forms — New Media shows. This exhibition consisted of site-specific and interactive works including Spring Cabinet, room of drippy paint buckets by Jim Dine; Yard, a courtyard full of salvaged tires by Allan Kaprow; as well as a recreation of Claes Oldenburg's Store.[18]
Jackson worked with Julian Stanczak,[7] and the gallery's 1964 exhibition of his paintings led to the coining of the term "Op Art" by Time Magazine.[12] Around the same time, Jackson established Red Parrot Films, a production company that made documentaries on art and artists.[4] Their film "The Ivory Knife," on Paul Jenkins, was awarded a prize at the Venice Biennale in the mid 1960s.[4] The gallery was also a leader in the publishing and marketing of artist prints, and ephemera. Jackson and Anderson worked with Jim Dine, Sam Francis, Julian Stanczak, John Hultberg, and Karel Appel on limited editions.[12]
Prints from Martha Jackson's collection were exhibited in "Martha Jackson Graphics" at the University of Buffalo Anderson Gallery in 2015.[12]
In 2021 the Hollis Taggart gallery presented the exhibit Wild and Brilliant: The Martha Jackson Gallery and Post-War Art.[20][21] The exhibition was organized by independent curator Jillian Russo, accompanied by an eponymous essay and catalog.[18]
Martha Jackson is portrayed in the 2022 Geraldine Brooks best seller historic novel, Horse, based upon the life of the race horse Lexington.[22][23]
^ abcdefHess, Thomas B. (Summer 1960). "Mixed Mediums for a Soft Revolution". ARTnews. 59 (4): 45, 62.
^ abcGlenn, Constance W.; Albright-Tomb, Linda (1997). The Great American Pop Art Store: Multiples of the Sixties. Santa Monica, CA: Smart Art Press, in association with the University Art Museum, California State University, Long Beach. pp. 18, 98–99. ISBN0-936270-36-5.
^ abRusso, Jillian (2021). Wild and Brilliant: the Martha Jackson Gallery and Post-War Art. New York, NY: Hollis Taggart. pp. 6–21. ISBN978-1-7378463-9-0.