Bryce Hudson

Bryce Hudson

Bryce Hudson
Born (1979-03-29)March 29, 1979
Rabat, Morocco
Nationality American
Education Kent State University
Known for Painting, murals, psychology
Movement Abstract art, cubism, geometric abstraction, neoclassicism
Patron(s) Brown-Forman Corporation, Matthew Barzun, Henry Schein Corporation

Bryce Hudson (March 29, 1979, Rabat, Morocco Present, Louisville, Kentucky) is a Moroccan-American Neo-plasticist (De Stijl) painter. Hudson's early geometric paintings explore race and stereotypes through means of the Geometric abstraction style. Later in his career, influenced by the theories of Constructivism the paintings and wall sculptures referenced abstracted architectural and spatial elements. His printmaking combines movements in art history such as Minimalism and Rococo.[1]

Along with contemporaries Pierre Clerk and Ilya Bolotowsky, Hudson works within a small set of artist working within the Neo-Plastic style - not adhering to strict rules, but exploring the depth and future of geometric abstract art.[2]

Life

Bryce Hudson was born in Rabat, Morocco and adopted into an American family as an infant. He studied painting, psychology and sculpture Kent State University School of Fine Art. In a 1999 exhibit at the Speed Museum he explored mixed-race and psychological influences of race and identity in contemporary society.

Notable exhibits, awards and medals

References

  1. "Bryce Hudson Website". Modernist Icon. Retrieved 26 September 2015.
  2. "Neo Plasticism, DeStijl and its Contemporary Influences". Contemporist Icon. Retrieved 26 December 2012.
  3. "Speed Museum - Past Exhibits of 2000". Speed Art Museum. Retrieved 29 January 2001.

Further reading


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