FILTER RESULTS × Close
Skip to Content
Showing 1 of 1


Viola Frey

American
(1933–2004)

Standing Woman (Woman with Hands Over Heart)
1994

Stoneware, mounted on a black painted steel base
97 x 30 x 24 in. (246.38 x 76.2 x 60.96 cm)
Gift of the Nora Eccles Treadwell Foundation
2021.14

Standing Woman (Woman/Hand Over Heart) comes from an important moment in Frey’s career when she was experimenting with techniques that emphasized the surface in dramatic ways. Frey used the large figure as a kind of armature for her painting and drawing. In this piece she applied color and texture in ways that resemble the work of Bay Area abstract expressionists, and figurative artists like Sonia Gechtoff and David Park. The resulting messy, gritty surface also evokes the early work of San Francisco Bay Area artists Joan Brown and Jay De Feo.

Frey was born in Lodi, California, in 1933. At CCAC, she earned her BFA, studying painting with Richard Diebenkorn and ceramics with Vernon Coykendall and Charles Fiske. In 1956–57 she worked with Mark Rothko and George Rickey at Tulane University in New Orleans. After a sojourn in New York, Frey returned to the Bay Area in 1960, where she taught color and light classes in the CCAC painting department. She became a full-time ceramics professor, and was an influential faculty member until her retirement in 1999. Frey is considered by many to be one of the most important female ceramic artists of the late twentieth century.

Bolton Colburn
Sara Morris


Keywords
Click a term to view the records with the same keyword
This object has the following keywords:

Exhibition List
This object was included in the following exhibitions:

Also found in
Click a portfolio name to view all the objects in that portfolio
This object is a member of the following portfolios:


Your current search criteria is: Keyword is "BAK" and [Objects]Artist is "Viola Frey".





This site facilitates access to the art and artifact collections by providing digitally searchable records for thousands objects. The information on these pages is not definitive or comprehensive. We are regularly adding artworks and updating research online. We welcome your comments.