Anna Kunz American
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Works on Paper
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Biography
Anna Kunz was born in Chicago, Illinois, where she continues to live and work. After receiving her BFA from the Art Institute of Chicago, Kunz went on to complete her MFA at Northwestern University, eventually attending the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in Skowhegan, Maine. Her works on paper, paintings, installations, and other compositions have been exhibited in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Dallas, New York, Madrid, and Poland. Kunz's work has also been included in numerous public and private collections.
Kunz creates diverse works that span paper, painting, often employing painted and dyed fabrics, her artworks function like nets that capture and manipulate light and color. These experiential pieces frequently incorporate various objects and surfaces that enrich the viewer's experience, inviting them to engage with the space dynamically as they move through it.
Kunz has collaborated with architects, dancers, and musicians to produce décor for theatrical and dance performances, notably for the Merce Cunningham Dance Company and The Seldoms. Her collaborations extend to choreographer Benji Ninja, Family Voguers, and the Performance Collective “Industry of the Ordinary,” showcased in a retrospective at the Chicago Cultural Center. A commissioned suspended artwork resides in a newly constructed building at 1300 Pennsylvania Avenue in Washington, DC, designed by Helmut Jahn, alongside works by Alice Aycock and Chris Wood. Additionally, her large-scale commissioned pieces include a seven-piece painting part of the William P. Clements Junior collection at the Southwest Texas University Medical Center's new Radiology Oncology wing. Upcoming collaborations feature Kunz's paintings as textiles for designer Nina Arias in New York City, where she described them as “moveable paintings, with the body as armature.”
Kunz is the recipient of multiple awards and accolades, including nominations from 3Arts, Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation, Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, Emerging Artist award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts, Artadia Chicago, Rema Hort-Mann Foundation's Individual Artists Grant, and The Joan Mitchell Foundation in 2020. She has been awarded numerous artist residencies, including the Golden Family Foundation Residency, Edward Albee Foundation Residency, the Space Program at Marie Sharpe Walsh Foundation, the Roger Brown Artist Residency, and, most recently, the Monira Foundation Residency.
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Public Collections, Honors & Residencies
The Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
The Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois
Smart Museum of Art, University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois
Columbia University Teachers College Art Collection, New York
UT Southwestern Medical Center Art Collection, Dallas, Texas
City of Chicago Department of Cultural Affairs, Logan Square Library
University of North Dakota Art Collections, Grand Forks, North Dakota
West Virginia University Art Collection, Morgantown, West Virginia
The Space Program, Marie Walsh Sharpe Art Foundation (2010 - 2011)
Roger Brown Artist Residency, Chicago (n.d.)
Edward Albee Foundation Artist Residency (2014)
Golden Family Foundation Residency, New Berlin, NY (2018)
Monira Foundation at Mana Contemporary, Artist in Residence (2024)
Commission: Eidolon, Thresholds banner commission, Smart Museum of Art -
Exhibitions
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55 Years
Isn't That Long Enough? Jun 26 – Aug 14, 2025Featuring paintings, works on paper, sculpture, film, and archival ephemera from the SFMOMA Library, and SFAI archive, this ambitious exhibition showcases museum-quality works by contemporary and historical artists, illustrating Berggruen...View More -
California Gold
Jun 20 – Jul 25, 2024Exhibiting Artists:View More
Tauba Auerbach | John Baldessari | Larry Bell | Helen Berggruen | Sarah Blaustein | Katherine Boxall | Val Britton | Christopher Brown | Andy Burgess | Dean Byington | Bruce Cohen | Adriane Colburn | Travis Collinson | Mark di Suvero | June Edmonds | Charles Gaines | Daniel Gibson | Isca Greenfield-Sanders | Michael Gregory | Stephen Hannock | Sarah Hotchkiss | Seth Kaufman | Clare Kirkconnell | Matt Kleberg | Anna Kunz | Charles Lee | Barry McGee | Klea McKenna | Tom McKinley | Vanessa Marsh | Richard Misrach | Nicole Mueller | Ed Ruscha | Richard Serra | Jillian Shea | Stephanie H. Shih | Kyle Warren Smith | Joni Sternbach | Marie Thibeault | Dani Tull | Darren Waterston | Griff Williams | Jonas Wood | Christopher Woodcock -
Works on Paper
Mar 7 – Apr 25, 2024View More -
Abstract Perspectives
Jan 11 – Feb 29, 2024Berggruen Gallery is proud to present Abstract Perspectives, a group exhibition that highlights underrepresented voices in the world of contemporary abstract art. Abstract Perspectives will be on view from January 11th through February 29th, 2024. The gallery will host an opening reception on Thursday, January 11th from 5:00 to 7:00 pm. This curated collection furthers abstract artwork as a vital means of expression and social commentary beyond representational or stylized subject matter. While the artworks vary widely in size, media, and style, the entire show celebrates abstract art as a resistant break from convention, continually stretching the boundaries of visual language and aesthetics.View More
The exhibition will feature work by the following artists:
Diana al-Hadid
Tauba Auerbach
Radcliffe Bailey
Sarah Blaustein
Cecily Brown
Sarah Crowner
Heather Day
Clare Kirkconnell
Anna Kunz
Liza Lou
Julie Mehretu
Beatriz Milhazes
Odili Donald Odita
Abstract Perspectives, January 11 – February 29, 2024. On view at 10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105. Images and previews are available upon request. For all inquiries, please contact the gallery by phone at (415) 781-4629 or by email at info@berggruen.com. -
Anna Kunz
The Tide Jan 12 – Feb 18, 2023View More -
Summer Group Show
Jun 9 – Jul 23, 2022Berggruen Gallery is pleased to present Summer Group Show. This exhibition presents a curated selection of historical and contemporary works in conversation, creating an interplay of color with intricate unions of form, texture, and movement. In Summer Group Show, the gallery is excited to highlight work by artists with both new connections, and long-standing relationships with the gallery. The exhibition illuminates original perspective and vibrancy and breathes freshness into the season and months ahead. Summer Group Show will be on view at Berggruen Gallery from June 9 through July 23, 2022. The exhibition features work by:View More
Polly Apfelbaum | Richard Diebenkorn | Austin Eddy | Günther Förg | Mark Fox | Matthew Feyld
Alexander Gorlizki | Al Held | Sarah Hotchkiss | Ellsworth Kelly | Matt Kleberg
Paul Kremer | Anna Kunz | Julian Lethbridge | Sol LeWitt | Alicia McCarthy
Beatriz Milhazes | JJ Miyaoka-Pakola | Sarah Morris | Margaux Ogden | Brent Wadden | Lucy Williams
Summer Group Show opens June 9, 2022. On view at 10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105. Images and preview are available upon request. For all inquiries, please contact the gallery by phone (415) 781-4629 or by email info@berggruen.com. -
Drawing with Scissors
Contemporary Works in Conversation with Matisse's Jazz Mar 10 – Apr 23, 2022“By creating these colored, paper cut-outs, it seems to me that I am happily anticipating things to come. I don't think that I have ever found such balance as I have in creating these paper cut-outs. But I know that it will only be much later that people will realize to what extent the work I am doing today is in step with the future.” — Henri Matisse, 1951View More
Berggruen Gallery is pleased to present Drawing with Scissors: Contemporary Works in Conversation with Matisse’s Jazz, a group exhibition inspired by the monumental set of twenty pochoir prints by French artist Henri Matisse. Drawing with Scissors will be on view at Berggruen Gallery from March 10 through April 16, 2022. The exhibition features work by:
Polly Apfelbaum | John Baldessari | Bruce Cohen | Sarah Crowner | Richard Diebenkorn | Austin Eddy
Helen Frankenthaler | David Hockney | Ellsworth Kelly | Paul Kremer | Anna Kunz | JJ Manford
Henri Matisse | Beatriz Milhazes | Robert Motherwell | Kelly Ording | Muzae Sesay
Mickalene Thomas | Jonas Wood
Drawing with Scissors: Contemporary Works in Conversation with Matisse’s Jazz recognizes Matisse’s 1947 groundbreaking series Jazz and its formal and spirited connection to works by contemporary artists. During the post-war era, while battling personal illness, Matisse turned his isolation into creative liberation. While limited in mobility and struggling to paint and sculpt, he began exploring collage and the stencil process, pochoir. Using gouache, Matisse coated sheets of paper with paint, allowed them to dry for tactile texture, then cut and arranged the sheet into intricate shapes and forms. Matisse famously described this process as “drawing with scissors” linking “line with color, contour with the surface.” His chromatic collage series, Jazz, later made into a print series, is full of songful figuration, themes of performance, and a lively blend of hopefulness and unease. Through collage, Jazz combines a vibrant array of colors and forms and has been of great inspiration to contemporary artists. Jazz is a triumph of mixed media and artistic vitality and Drawing with Scissors celebrates its legacy and the continued discourse it elicits in the present day.
Matisse’s cut-outs, also known as découpés, paved the way for new explorations in material and structural composition. Brazilian artist Beatriz Milhazes creates multilayered, vibrant works that bloom with intricacy and layered construction. Yogurt is a geometric assemblage of mixed media on paper. Milhazes notes her direct influence from Matisse’s collage works; “When I think about Matisse’s cut-outs, I think about a painter working with collage. [His compositions] a construction of colors and beauty.”[i] Sarah Crowner’s stitched canvases also push beyond medium constraints. Her sewn segments recall the inventiveness of Matisse’s cut-outs, yet her shapes, while nodding to Matisse’s, are uniquely her own. Austin Eddy creates his own collage style with paint, adjoining color and motif. Pigeon in the park, explores the space found upon a painted surface, culling texture, and patterns to reinterpret representation.
Where some artists explore Matisse’s collage technique, others respond to the artist’s fluidity of form and elegant use of color and line. Drawing with Scissors brings together distinguished drawings, collages, and prints by Ellsworth Kelly. Like Matisse, Kelly focused on the depths of simplicity. Untitled (Red/Blue) juxtaposes colors in search of balance; a reoccurring theme throughout Matisse’s découpés.
Houston based artist Paul Kremer, in a recent painting titled Cradle 01, responds to Matisse’s collage work. His buoyant shapes and colors emanate possibility and evoke the ease of Matisse’s creations in captivating motion. Kremer shares:
Matisse’s careful choreographing of palettes, his ability to convey a distinctive feeling with bold objects on flat planes of color, and the relentless positivity that emerges from his work have all been an inspiration to me. His color combinations are incomparably beautiful and surprising. And given all that was going on in his life, especially at the time of the cutouts, it’s wonderful that he made paintings feel the way they do. [ii]
Robert Motherwell and Helen Frankenthaler took to Matisse’s intuitive approach to color. For Matisse, color was an expression of the senses, and his découpés brought opportunity for new, smaller-scaled study. Frankenthaler’s painting Center Break and Motherwell’s Berggruen Series lithographs consider color, its expressive power, and its influence over us. Contemporary painter Anna Kunz responds to color in a similar, intuitive manner. She shares:
Matisse once remarked about his approach to painting being “studied carelessness”. This resonates with me because it regards the body’s knowing and the trusting of one’s intuition through practice. When I approach the canvas, I’ve got my studying done, so I can invite informed spontaneity to keep the works direct and fresh.[iii]
Other artists rejoice and react to Jazz’s gestural forms and movements. Matisse’s famed Icarus print, plate 8 in Jazz, presents an animated figure falling against a blue, sky background. Artist Mickalene Thomas draws interest and reference to Matisse’s representations of the female form. Her Sleep: Deux Femmes Noires calls attention to how cut-outs present reductive portraits, narrowing the gaze onto the subject. Working within the collage medium, Thomas reacts to fragmented representations found within canonical works like Jazz.
Matisse’s cut-outs appear within contemporary still life painting as well, enlivening interior spaces. Realist painter, Bruce Cohen, paints Matisse’s cuts-outs directly into his work, often represented beside windows suggesting the openness and depth they exude. John Baldessari’s Eight Soups appropriates Matisse’s 1912 painting, Goldfish and Sculpture, while adding his own characteristic humor and semiotic commentary. In his sublime composition, JJ Manford’s painting, Sunrise with Matisse, highlights a lively wall of cut-outs. In his own words, Manford expresses his inspiration from Matisse:
His paintings and collages retain a sense of the fun and spontaneity that went into making them; they never appear arduous or overly labored, remain both heavy and light. This is a sense that I also want to convey with my own paintings.[iv]
Drawing with Scissors additionally presents Matisse’s delicate line drawings, and their lasting influence for contemporary artists. Drawing was a central exercise for Matisse; he noted, “my line drawings are the purest and most direct translation of my emotion.”[v] This exhibition displays the intricacies of Matisse’s drawing collection, from figural expressions to still life observations. Matisse’s Nu Couché portrays the beauty of the artist’s drawing craft. He outlines the form of a woman with effortless detail and ease. Renowned artists Ellsworth Kelly, Richard Diebenkorn, and David Hockney have incorporated drawing into their own practices. Ellsworth Kelly’s delicate botanical surveys quietly depict his close observation to the shapes around him. Richard Diebenkorn’s charcoal on paper, Untitled 1963-64, recalls Nu Couché with its with mirroring simplicity and elegant demeanor. Hockney’s lithograph Black Tulips presents a singular still life, highlighting a grounded essence to his cross-medium work.
Drawing with Scissors honors Matisse’s relation to the Berggruen family. In 1953, John Berggruen’s father, Heinz Berggruen, exhibited Henri Matisse, papiers découpés, at his gallery in Paris. The presentation was the very first exhibition devoted to the cut-outs. The exhibition featured eighteen works and was widely received. Upon reflection, Heinz wrote: ‘In my opinion, the cut-outs, which verge on abstract art, have something magical about them; it is hard to say exactly what it is. Their language is profoundly lyrical, and, at the same time, monumental.”[vi]
At its core, Drawing with Scissors is a celebration of creative possibility. For Matisse, his cut-out process offered a novel conversion of artistic innovation and formal inspiration on matters of color and form. His découpés opened doors to new modes of expression for a challenging moment in his own life. Jazz is of great inspiration for contemporary artists and exudes Matisse’s long sense of curiosity and creativity.
Drawing with Scissors: Contemporary Works in Conversation with Matisse’s Jazz, March 10 – April 16, 2022. On view at 10 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105. Images and preview are available upon request. For all inquiries, please contact the gallery by phone (415) 781-4629 or by email info@berggruen.com.
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Art Fairs
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Art Basel Miami Beach
Miami Beach, Florida Dec 5 – 7, 20252025 will mark Berggruen Gallery’s twenty-third consecutive year participating in Art Basel Miami Beach, since the fair’s inception. Please visit us at the Miami Beach...View More -
The San Francisco Fall Show
San Francisco, California Oct 15 – 19, 2025Berggruen Gallery is delighted to participate in the 2025 San Francisco Fall Show. Please visit us at The Festival Pavilion at The Fort Mason Center. Tickets are required for all show dates. Exhibiting artists to be announced.View More -
FOG Design + Art
San Francisco, California Jan 22 – 26, 2025View More -
Art Basel Miami Beach
Miami Beach, Florida Dec 4 – 9, 20242024 will mark Berggruen Gallery’s twenty-second consecutive year participating in Art Basel Miami Beach, since the fair’s inception.View More -
The San Francisco Fall Show
San Francisco, California Oct 16 – 20, 2024View More -
The Armory Show
New York City, New York Sep 5 – 8, 2024Berggruen Gallery is pleased to announce its participation in The Armory Show 2024. Please visit us at Booth 213 at the Javits Center in New...View More -
FOG Design + Art
San Francisco, California Jan 18 – 21, 2024View More -
Art Basel Miami Beach
Miami Beach, Florida Dec 7 – 10, 2023View More -
The Armory Show
New York City, New York Sep 7 – 10, 2023View More -
FOG Design + Art
San Francisco, California Jan 19 – 22, 2023View More
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News
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Color Theory: Artist Anna Kunz Uses the Power of Pigment to Spark Emotion
LUXE Interiors + Design | By Deborah Bishop March 14, 2024For Chicago-based painter Anna Kunz, color never sits still. “In a composition, it moves and vibrates,” she says. “It’s alive and engaging—the opposite of static.'...Read more -
Manneken Press Publishes Anna Kunz's Collection Titled 'Echolocation'
Business Markets Insider | Press Release Newsfile May 11, 2023Bloomington, Illinois-based fine art publisher, Manneken Press, publishes the latest collection of works by Anna Kunz titled, 'Echolocation'. Manneken Press, a fine art publisher based...Read more -
The Many Colors of Anna Kunz
Chicago Gallery News | By Alison Reilly March 29, 2023In 2022, Anna Kunz stepped down as Associate Professor in the Art and Art History department at Columbia College. Throughout her 20 years at the...Read more -
San Francisco’s ‘unofficial art week’ returns. Here are 12 highlights not to miss
SF Chronicle Datebook | By Tony Bravo January 22, 2023Over the past decade, the third week of January has become an unofficial art week in San Francisco. Anchored by the Fog Design + Art...Read more -
The Pioneering Legacy of Henri Matisse's Jazz
Artsper Magazine | By Balasz Takac April 6, 2022By the 1940s, jazz music gained a broader appreciation and became adorned despite being demonized by the Nazis. It influenced a range of visual artists...Read more
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