Martha Diamond: ‘Looming Masses, Fleeting Vistas, Overwhelming Immersion’


Martha Diamond’s “New York With Purple No. 3” (2000), oil on linen, at the David Kordansky Gallery in Los Angeles[…] Credit… Martha Diamond Trust, via David Kordansky Gallery. [New York Times caption and illustration]

She completed an oil painting in one sitting, often mixing colors on the surface of the canvas.

Martha Diamond’s approach to painting, and her execution, delight me. I dream of achieving something even approximating her studied generality in my own practice. Her subject matter was New York City architecture. I relish the critic’s observation that Diamond wasn’t concerned with “assiduous documentation of the built environment,” but rather with conveying how it felt to her.

Her small studies — preparatory exercises for the large-scale works that follow — are tightly organized, keyhole views onto the grandeur of the city; most are on Masonite boards around 16 or 20 inches tall.


“Study for Yellow Sky,” 1986. Diamond’s methodical studies were consistent with her much larger pieces. Credit…
Martha Diamond Trust, via David Kordansky Gallery. [New York Times caption and illustration]

Here’s the 10-foot-wide painting resulting from “Study for Yellow Sky” (above):


Installation view of “Martha Diamond: Skin of the City.” The painting, with its peachy color, dominates the main gallery. Credit… Jeff McLane, via David Kordansky Gallery. [New York Times caption and illustration]

Underestimating Diamond is a trap for careless viewers. Even when her paintings look casual, or simple, she is solving complex problems. Take the large, squat “Highway,” a seemingly straightforward painting that did not particularly grab me on first appraisal. In time, I understood how Diamond had felt her way around this massive white building, reconstructing it section by section in her wobbly, wide strokes. (She notoriously used only her left hand to paint, because, she once explained, “it’s connected to the part of the brain that sees space, volume, and probably colors better.”) It’s the kind of building one takes for granted; Diamond helps us to see it anew.


“Highway” (1984), oil on linen. […] Credit… Martha Diamond Trust, via David Kordansky Gallery. [New York Times caption and illustration]

Diamond reportedly made these “detail” paintings to work out how to handle particularly tricky sections of a larger composition…


Martha Diamond, “Pass (Detail),” 1981. Credit… Martha Diamond Trust, via David Kordansky Gallery. [New York Times caption and illustration]

(Jonathan Griffin, “In Martha Diamond’s Art, She Took Manhattan,” New York Times, 4-11-24)

(c) 2024 JMN — EthicalDative. All rights reserved

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About JMN

I live in Texas and devote much of my time to easel painting on an amateur basis. I stream a lot of music, mostly jazz, throughout the day. I like to read and memorize poetry.
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2 Responses to Martha Diamond: ‘Looming Masses, Fleeting Vistas, Overwhelming Immersion’

  1. What an interesting artist. I really like the photo of the installation view – the size of the painting is impressive! Thanks for yet another informative post Jim!

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