Robin Hill
Blue Lines, 1995
oil stick on waxed paper, cast plaster, pigment
dimensions variable
previous gallery location:
Lennon-Weinberg, Inc.
560 Broadway
New York, NY
10012





One of the origin myths
of Western art has the maiden Dibutade tracing her lover's shadow on the wall;
another has a shepherd drawing the contour of a shadow on the ground. In Robin
Hill's work, line comes first, and can even cast a shadow. Drawing has the
materiality of sculpture, and, far from requiring a model to trace, generates
its own content. This show was a demonstration of life still left in the modernist
story. "
Paul Mattick Jr., on Robin Hill,
Art in America
September 1995
"East meets west
in Robin Hill's drawings and sculptures of Interlacing mandala patterns. The
sculptures are floor pieces built up from what look like oversized corks cast
in plaster from paper cups, dipped into blue paint, and then arranged on the
floor with the help of paper templates. There's something endearing about
the contrast between the clunky, familiar shape of the "corks" and
the hypnotic pattern constructed from them."
Pepe Karmel,
Robin Hill at Lennon-Weinberg, Inc.,
The New York Times
February
17, 1995