Anne Truitt – Waterleaf

Matthew Marks is pleased to announce Anne Truitt: Waterleaf, the next exhibition in his gallery at 523 West 24th Street. The exhibition includes a series of twelve paintings on handmade paper entitled Waterleaf that will be exhibited for the first time, along with three sculptures made between 1983 and 2003.

Truitt’s Waterleaf works, made in 2003, are among the final works on paper the artist created before her death at the age of eighty‑three. Truitt described waking one morning with the sudden impression that her sense of shape, structure, and proportion had departed her: “I was left with sound and reception and out of them alone made… Waterleaf. ” In each Waterleaf work, subtle variations in color create vertical or horizontal lines that divide each sheet into halves or quadrants. The compositions recall Truitt’s lifelong preoccupation with delineating space. As she wrote in 1974, “This dependence on placement is ingrained in me. I pay attention to latitude and longitude. It’s as if the outside world has to match some personal horizontal and vertical axis. I have to line up with it in order to be comfortable.”

Installation view of Anne Truitt: Waterleaf, Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, February 13 – April 18, 2026 © Estate of Anne Truitt / The Bridgeman Art Library / Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery
Installation view of Anne Truitt: Waterleaf, Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, February 13 – April 18, 2026 © Estate of Anne Truitt / The Bridgeman Art Library / Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery

Three of Truitt’s well‑known totemic sculptures are also on view, each over six feet tall and made with a labor‑intensive process she first developed in the late 1960s. She would apply up to forty layers of paint by hand, every layer sanded to a fine finish. At the bottom, each sculpture has a thin band of contrasting color. “What I’m trying to do is lift the color up and set it free in three dimensions, and I have spent my whole life trying to do it,” Truitt described. “I’m trying to move it out into space so the color, magnetized to the line of gravity from the sky down to the ground—just as we are—becomes flesh, it becomes human, it becomes emotion, it becomes alive, and it vibrates. I don’t let it be quiet, except for the line underneath that I’m anchoring it on.”

Anne Truitt (1921–2004) lived and worked in Washington, DC, for most of her life. The first museum retrospective of her work was held at the Whitney Museum of American Art in 1973. A posthumous survey was organized by the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington in 2009. In March, the first European retrospective of Truitt’s work will open at the K20 Kunstsammlung Nordrhein-Westfalen in Düsseldorf. The exhibition will then travel to the Musée de Grenoble in France and to the Museo Reina Sofía in Madrid.

Installation view of Anne Truitt: Waterleaf, Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, February 13 – April 18, 2026 © Estate of Anne Truitt / The Bridgeman Art Library / Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery
Installation view of Anne Truitt: Waterleaf, Matthew Marks Gallery, New York, February 13 – April 18, 2026 © Estate of Anne Truitt / The Bridgeman Art Library / Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery

© Text and Photo Courtesy of Matthew Marks Gallery

DETAILS
Anne Truitt – Waterleaf
13 February → 18 April 2026

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