Sam Gilliam American, 1933-2022

Overview
“I like this experience of coming up with something different. That’s what I’m here for...That’s what art is supposed to do; it’s supposed to change.” -- SAM GILLIAM
Sam Gilliam occupies a central position in the history of Post-War American painting, distinguished by a sustained commitment to formal innovation and a rigorous interrogation of the medium’s boundaries. Emerging from the Washington, D.C. artistic milieu in the mid-1960s, Gilliam both extended and destabilized the principles of the Washington Color School, pushing chromatic abstraction toward newly architectural and performative dimensions. His successive technical breakthroughs culminated in the seminal Drape paintings, in which unstretched, pigment-saturated canvases were suspended from walls, ceilings, and architectural supports. These works redefined the spatial and ontological status of painting, transforming canvas into a sculptural, environmental presence.
 
Gilliam’s reconfiguration of the painted surface became a mode of asserting artistic agency within a rapidly shifting social landscape, articulating a vision of abstraction inseparable from its historical moment. Over the ensuing decades, he pursued an exploratory trajectory in which experimentation itself constituted a governing methodology. In dialogue with the improvisational structures of jazz, Gilliam’s practice evolved through an expanding array of materials, chromatic strategies, and spatial formats, generating a body of work marked by continual reinvention and a sustained commitment to the expressive possibilities of abstraction.
 
Gilliam has been the subject of numerous solo exhibitions at institutions worldwide including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. (2022); Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland (2018); Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C. (2011); J.B. Speed Memorial Museum, Louisville, KY (1996); Whitney Museum of American Art, Philip Morris Branch, New York, NY (1993); The Studio Museum in Harlem, NY (1982); and Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY (1971), among many other institutions. In 2021, Dia Art Foundation, New York, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston made the historic joint acquisition of Gilliam’s important early work, the monumental installation Double Merge (1968), which was on view 2019–2022 at Dia Beacon in New York. Recent group exhibitions include Flight into Egypt: Black Artists and Ancient Egypt, 1876–Now, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY (2024–2025); Edges of Ailey, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY (2024); Day for Night: New American Realism, organized by the Aïshti Foundation, Palazzo Barberini, Rome, Italy (2024); Abstraction after Modernism: Recent Acquisitions, Menil Collection, Houston, TX (2024); and American Voices and Visions: Modern and Contemporary Art, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C. (2023). His work is included in over fifty permanent collections, including the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, France; Tate Modern, London, England; Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, NY; and Art Institute of Chicago, IL.
Works
  • Sam Gilliam, White Gardenia, 1992
    White Gardenia, 1992
Exhibitions