
Dike Blair
in conversation with
Noami Fry
Saturday, February 21, 3 pm
Karma
549 West 26th Street
New York
Dike Blair uses gouache, oil, his own photographs, and strategies appropriated from Postminimalist sculpture to create intimate tableaux that transform quotidian sights and materials into exercises in formalism. A writer and teacher as well as an artist, Blair came up in the downtown scene of 1970s New York among punk rockers and Postmodernists. In the early 1980s, against prevailing art world trends toward Neo-Expressionism, he began rendering scenes from his life in gouache on paper. These ongoing diaristic paintings are devoid of human figures but nonetheless evoke the specter of the artist whose daily life plays out at a remove across their finely-wrought surfaces. Blair lives in New York and Sullivan County.
Naomi Fry is a staff writer at the New Yorker where she writes about pop culture, books, and art, and a co-host of the magazine’s culture podcast, Critics at Large.



