1054 31st
STREET, NW WASHINGTON, D.C.
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Ed Clark
“... art is not subject to political games; its importance elevates it above any racial difference. All men of talent, of noble spirit, can make it.”
— Edward Clark, “Un
Musée pour
L'Art Vivant, November 1968; Published by Galerie Maeght
Edward Clark is an
abstract painter whose work has drawn accolades internationally for
five
decades. He is the first painter credited with working on a shaped
canvas, an
innovation that influenced contemporary art through the 1950s and
1960s. He is
also known for his powerful brush stroke, large-scale canvases, and
especially,
his use of color, which makes some people, call him an "Abstract
Impressionist".
Born in the
Storyville section of
After living for
five years in
Clark has always
been an inventive and creative artist, experimenting with
techniques—his
innovative use of the push broom, for example, and his method of
working on
paper with dry pigment, inspired by the "pouring sand" technique of
the Pueblo tribe of the American Southwest.
His work continues
to evolve and astonish.




Parish Gallery is open
Tuesday through Saturday, from noon to 6 pm; other hours by appointment.