Jasmina Danowski: Love Letters to Exile
Danowski's art transports viewers into immersive floral landscapes and expansive spatial dimensions, drawing compelling parallels with artists such as Joan Mitchell. Rather than straightforwardly depicting natural and still-life elements, Danowski delves into the profound implications of her artistic process. Her work navigates the intricate balance between abstraction and representation, seamlessly merging the unity and individuality of forms. Through nuanced compositions, she invites contemplation on both explicit and suggested meanings, creating a rich tapestry of visual dialogue that resonates with profound artistic depth.
Born in Stuttgart, Germany, in 1960, Jasmina Danowski is a mixed media abstract painter known for her exploration of color, texture, and mark on both panel and paper. Based in Brooklyn, NY, she works out of a studio, employing a process-oriented and physical approach to her art. Using long and wide brushes, she creates vibrant compositions directly on the floor, drawing on influences from calligraphy, abstract expressionism, and natural imagery.
In her work, Danowski evokes sensations of immersion in floral landscapes or spatial dimensions, reminiscent of artists like Joan Mitchell. She suggests rather than directly depicts natural and still life elements, delving into the implications of her process to strike a balance between abstraction and representation, unity and individuality of forms, and explicit versus suggested meanings.
Danowski holds a B.F.A. from the San Francisco Art Institute (1990) and an M.F.A. from Bard College, New York (1997). She is a recipient of two Pollock-Krasner awards (2001, 2005) and has exhibited her work at prestigious venues such as the Boston Center for the Arts, Mississippi Museum of Art, and Spanierman Modern in New York. Her pieces are also housed in collections at institutions like the Mississippi Museum of Art and Westfield State University.