APRIL GORNIK

Her work ‘Weighing the Ocean (2018)’ on view in the exhibition exemplifies her charcoal drawing works which often excavate the power, force and tempestuousness of the sea.

April Gornik is an American painter whose atmospheric landscape paintings focus heavily on cloud formations over bodies of water. “Now I make my landscapes so that I can be in them,” the artist remarked. “That’s why I alter them [landscapes], that’s why I make them somewhat artificial, because I want to take possession of them.” Born on 1953 in Cleveland, OH, she studied at the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design in Halifax, Canada, receiving her BFA there in 1976. Strongly referencing American Luminists like John Fredrick Kensett, the artist's work has gained significant attention and critical acclaim since her first solo exhibition. Gornik lives and works in Long Island, NY with her husband, the painter Eric Fischl. Her works are presently held in the collections of institutions such as The Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum in Washington, D.C, among others.

 

APRIL GORNIK
Weighing the Ocean, 2018
Charcoal on paper
37 ½ x 50 in.
Signed and dated (lower right recto)