Gail Flanery
American, b. 1947
Gail Flanery is a printmaker whose work is primarily abstract, suggestive of landscape or natural elements. Her monotypes are unique works on paper composed on a plate, inked, printed and often further manipulated with collage, or drawn on with pastel or pencil. An intuitive colorist Flanery’s compositions are painterly, evocative of space and mood with a restraint inspired by Rothko. Flanery received an MFA from Cooper Union, studied Japanese “Hanga” woodblock printing with Bill Paden and with the Master Intaglio Printmaking workshop in Vinalhaven Maine. She has an extensive exhibition history in New York and is in public, private and corporate collections including Jane Vorhees Zimmerli Art Museum, Rutgers Archives, Amoco, Chase Bank, Citibank, IBM, Smith Barney, Cleary Gottlieb, Solomon Brothers, Equitable Tower, Millbank Tweed, Shearson Lehman, Simpson Thatcher, Texas Commerce Bank, US Trust Company and more. Flanery lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.
Submitted by 440 Gallery


