Westwood Gallery NYC
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • Art Fairs
  • Research & Projects
  • Publications
  • News
  • Press
  • About
Cart
0 items £
Checkout

Item added to cart

View cart & checkout
Continue shopping
Menu

Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979

Past exhibition
9 Nov 2023 - 13 Jan 2024
  • Overview
  • Artworks
  • Installation Views
  • Press release
  • Publications
Overview
Gerhardt Liebmann, Crescent Moon Rising, 1979
Gerhardt Liebmann, Crescent Moon Rising, 1979

WESTWOOD GALLERY NYC presents Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979, a solo exhibition of ten paintings and fourteen drawings created during the 1970s. This exhibition is curated by James Cavello and part of the gallery core program highlighting overlooked yet significant artists in history.

 

Gerhardt Liebmann (1928-1989) was an accomplished artist, architect, archaeologist, pilot, explorer, and activist.  Although Liebmann had always painted and sketched, it was not until his move to New York City in 1968 when he was able devote his future to being a full-time artist. On exhibit were three series of work created by Liebmann from 1972-1979, representing the trajectory of his quest to understand the world from ground to sky.

Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979 was on view to the public November 9 – December 30.

Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Artworks
  • Acrylic painting on canvas of two vast city rooftops side by side, each with a small chair and vent
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Two Roofs-Two Chairs, 1977
  • Acrylic painting on canvas of a vast city rooftop populated only by a small vent and two chairs
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Roof with Two Chairs, 1977
  • Acrylic painting on canvas of a city rooftop featuring a small elements including a vent, two chairs, and a ladder casting long shadows as they are lit by the moonlight from the upper left corner
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Roof Debris, Summer Moon, 1977
  • Framed acrylic painting of a city rooftop at night with a glowing crescent moon emerging from a large shaft
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Crescent Moon Rising, 1979
  • Acrylic painting on canvas of a city roof with a water tower and a small standing structure made of five sticks on the floor in the foreground
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Roof at 6:00 O'Clock, 1976
  • Framed acrylic on canvas of a parking lot in SoHo, New York City, depicted realistically
    Gerhardt Liebmann, SoHo Parking Lot, circa early 1970s
  • Acrylic painting on canvas of a city roof with a water tower and two sticks with wire affixed to them lying on the floor in the foreground
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Chair on Roof, 1976
  • Acrylic painting on canvas of a wall with countless baby dolls on top of and leaning on it as it recedes into a point on the horizon next to a setting sun
    Gerhardt Liebmann, A Parable of Young and Old Dolls, 1975
  • Framed acrylic on canvas of a doll running in a surreal barren landscape
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Acrylic on canvas of a doll partially buried in sand and surrounded by seashells in an eerie beach setting
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Sparse pencil drawing on paper of a rooftop featuring a small pipe, a vent, and two chairs casting long shadows, with handwritten notes next to each element
    Gerhardt Liebmann, A Roof that Happens to be in New York, 1977
  • Framed color pencil drawing of the roof seen at the corner of a building at night, with a glowing crescent moon in the foreground
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Moon Rise, 1980
  • Framed pencil drawing of the corner of a building with countless windows occupying almost its entire facade
    Gerhardt Liebmann, A Window for Each, 1980
  • Pencil drawing on paper depicting the tops of nearly identical rooftops in a neat array, each with a faint crescent moon hovering over it
    Gerhardt Liebmann, SoHo Rooftops at 11pm, 1977
  • Mixed media collage of an array of identical baby doll images each emerging out of small manilla envelopes with text
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Mixed media collage of an array of identical baby doll images ranging in pale skintones
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Mixed media collage of an array of nine different baby doll images each emerging out of small envelopes
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Mixed media collage of a seven by seven grid of a numbered illustrations of seated baby dolls, some colorless, and some pale fleshtones
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Mixed media collage of a seven by seven grid of a numbered illustrations of seated baby dolls
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Black and white pencil drawing on paper of disembodied doll parts casting an eerie orange shadow
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Seemingly unfinished pencil drawing on paper of a cluster of eerily upright dolls
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Pencil drawing on paper of a seemingly unfinished sketch depicting the internal mechanisms of a headless doll
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Pencil drawing on paper of an eerily upright doll with an outstretched arm atop an abstract wave of blue and purple
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
  • Pencil drawing on paper of an eerie array of numerous dismantled doll parts
    Gerhardt Liebmann, Untitled (Doll Series), circa mid 1970s
Installation Views
  • Installation view of our 2023 exhibition Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979 at Westwood Gallery NYC

    Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979 | Installation View

  • Installation view of our 2023 exhibition Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979 at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979 | Installation View
  • Installation view of our 2023 exhibition Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979 at Westwood Gallery NYC
    Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979 | Installation View
Press release

WESTWOOD GALLERY NYC presents “Gerhardt Liebmann: The SoHo Years, 1972-1979,” a solo exhibition of ten paintings and fourteen drawings created during the 1970s. This exhibition is curated by James Cavello and part of the gallery core program highlighting overlooked yet significant artists in history. The exhibition will be open to the public November 9 – December 30, Tues-Sat, 10am-6pm.


Gerhardt Liebmann (1928-1989) was an accomplished artist, architect, archaeologist, pilot, explorer, and activist. He grew up in an agricultural area of Oregon and accelerated in school while picking pears to make money for his youthful art-related projects. Due to his advanced academic and athletic abilities, he received scholarship offers to attend Yale or Princeton and decided on Harvard because of their architectural program. He was a brilliant student who graduated magna cum laude and Phi Beta Kappa in 1950. In graduate school at Harvard, his thesis captured the attention of Walter Gropius, the founder of Bauhaus. Liebmann completed his master’s in architecture in 18 months, rather than 3 years. Thereafter he received a Fulbright Fellowship to study architecture in Paris at École Nationale Superiéure des Beaux-Arts, as well as receiving Harvard’s Sheldon Fellowship to study in Athens. While in Europe, Liebmann became fascinated with other cultures and embarked on a solo motorcycle trip around the world. In 1953 he joined the Army and due to his expert mountaineering skills, he was assigned to a team in the Arctic Circle and surveyed the polar ice caps for two years. For the next fifteen years, he traveled the world, including extensively in the Middle East, as an artist and architect, as well as designing several homes for friends, always working independently. In 1968 Liebmann settled in SoHo and became a civic leader as the first President of the SoHo Artists Association; he worked toward re-zoning SoHo for mixed residential, retail, industrial use, and to preserve the cast iron buildings. He spoke on behalf of artists to champion their artwork as valuable to the economy and the need for artists to have a place to live and work in an arts community, such as SoHo in New York City.


Liebmann always painted and sketched until he could devote himself in New York City to being a full-time artist, which was his lifetime pursuit. His first series of paintings in the mid-nineteen sixties incorporated red bricks as symbols of infinite perspective and unreal spaces. In the book, Gerhardt Liebmann: A Renaissance Man (1996), sections are dedicated to describing the genesis of the brick paintings as a journey into the paintings of the 1970s and 80s.


Liebmann’s artwork has not been exhibited for over twenty-seven years, a hidden treasure by an accomplished and significant New York artist. The last posthumous solo exhibition of his artworks was at Gallery: Gertrude Stein in 1996.


On exhibit in Westwood Gallery NYC are three series of work created by Liebmann from 1972-1979, representing the trajectory of his quest to understand the world from ground to sky. This includes empty urban landscapes, a series of doll remnants from a nearby Greene Street factory, and a series of surrealist SoHo rooftops. As an explorer of world culture, after three different global trips by motorcycle and hitchhiking, Liebmann explored SoHo with the same wonder in viewing cast iron buildings, factories, parking lots and warehouses. His paintings capture the entrapment and uneasiness of urban life, while also rendering a subtle stillness, evocative of a Hopper landscape. A painting on exhibit is a view of an empty SoHo parking lot at 61 Grand Street, however, a painted Texaco sign on a nearby gas station appears to be the only recognizable symbol of humanity.


An unusual series of paintings on exhibit, of dolls and doll parts, are personifications of human and nonhuman representations. When Liebmann would walk on Greene Street, he came across plastic doll parts, jettisoned debris from a nearby doll factory. Liebmann would collect these precious findings and bring them back to his studio. “Dolls are used in my recent work because they are so beautifully innocent” he explained. “Dolls stand for mankind in relation to our earth, to each other, and to our God. They are without personality so dolls can personify a human as humankind.” Some of the doll drawings on exhibit were given names for each doll, typed on tiny labels and glued to the paper.


The third body of work focuses on the expressionistic quality of SoHo rooftops, representing the vast spaces with uncommon architectural elements and urban debris amidst a flat expanse. In an early painting from this series, Roof at 6:00 O’Clock (1976), sunlight rakes across a nearly empty tar-caulked rooftop, casting shadows from airducts, a water tower, and a wooden sawhorse; distant buildings on the horizon are the only reference to the city beyond, reminiscent of the flattened spatial structures in Giorgio de Chirico’s paintings. In the later Crescent Moon Rising (1979), his focus turns more Surrealist as a delicate crescent moon rises from a central courtyard-like space.


Throughout each of the three series on view, Liebmann shifts his gaze from looking out on the streets to looking down on urban artefacts, to looking up and beyond the city’s horizon. While maintaining an approach to painting that is both photo realistic and surrealist, his paintings are profoundly connected to SoHo and to our world. Liebmann writes, “In all the works there is a thread, I think, that ties them together. Beyond the mere emphasis on space, that is. Even though I seldom use the figure of man, it is man which is my theme: his loneliness, his innocence in the hands of God, his numbers overwhelming the earth.”

Publications
  • Gerhardt Liebmann

    Gerhardt Liebmann

    The SoHo Years Westwood Gallery NYC, 2023
    Hardcover 46 pages
    Publisher: Westwood Gallery NYC
    ISBN: 978-0-9655834-9-7
    Dimensions: 10 x 8 inches
    Read more

Related artist

  • Click to view information about artist Gerhardt Liebmann

    Gerhardt Liebmann

Back to exhibitions
Privacy Policy
Accessibility Policy
Manage cookies
© 2025 Westwood Gallery NYC
Site by Artlogic
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Facebook, opens in a new tab.
Artnet, opens in a new tab.

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences