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Florence Miller Pierce Sold at Auction Prices

b. 1918 - d. 2007

Florence Miller Pierce (July 27, 1918 – October 25, 2007) was an American artist best known for her innovative resin relief paintings. Her work has often been linked with monochrome painting and minimalism.

Born Florence Melva Miller on July 27, 1918, she grew up in Washington, D.C. where her parents owned and managed a large boarding school named the Countryside School. As a child traveling to New Mexico to visit her mother's family in Albuquerque and Santa Fe, Miller became familiar with the landscape which would later become her home. At fifteen Miller began to study art with a private tutor, May Ashton. It was Ashton who introduced Miller to the Phillips Collection, considered to be the first museum of Modern Art in the United States. It was a rare opportunity for the young girl to develop an appreciation of some of modern art's greatest masters. Miller spent considerable time at the museum and began to take classes at the Studio School there in 1935.

Following her graduation from high school, Miller wished to continue her study of art. Having learned of noted artist Emil Bisttram's School of Art in Taos, New Mexico, Miller convinced her parents to allow her to attend by arranging a meeting with Bisttram while he was visiting Washington, D.C. mounting a mural exhibition. The following summer, at only eighteen, Miller traveled alone to the remote village of Taos to study with Bisttram. While in Taos that summer, she and the other students painted mostly traditional Southwest landscapes, still lifes, and portraits.

Following her return home to Washington, D.C., Miller studied briefly at the Corcoran School of Art.[5] During this time Miller met Theosophists Auriel Bessemer and his wife. The couple had studied with Annie Besant who was herself a student of Theosophical Society co-founder Helena Blavatsky. This meeting would prove to be a connection to ideas Miller encountered later in the Transcendental Painters Group. Bessemer offered Miller a scholarship to his school, but she decided to return to Taos. She arrived back in Taos in January in the middle of a snow storm.

Miller found that the winter program at The Bisttram School of Art was very different from what she had experienced in the summer. With fewer students the dynamic was much more intense and the focus was entirely on abstraction rather than on figurative painting.[2][5] It was also hard work. The students were responsible for keeping the studio's woodstove alight and required to work eight hours a day. It was during this period that she met fellow art student Horace Pierce. The two began a friendship which eventually became a romance. They were married in 1938.

Of her years studying at the Bisttram School Miller later said, "It wasn't so much an education as an initiation into art."[2] Before founding his own school in Taos, Bisttram had taught at the Nikolai Roerich Museum School in New York. The Russian mystic painter, Roerich, felt that art had the ability to change world consciousness and promote peace and brotherhood Bisttram had brought these spiritual values with him to Taos, where in addition to rigorous exercises in composition and color theory, he expected his students to read books on Transcendentalism and Theosophy, including works by Emerson, Nietzsche, Jung, and Kandinsky's Concerning the Spiritual in Art.

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  • Florence Miller Pierce (1918-2007): Two Works- Spire No. 3 and Spire No. 4
    Oct. 05, 2024

    Florence Miller Pierce (1918-2007): Two Works- Spire No. 3 and Spire No. 4

    Est: $1,000 - $2,000

    Florence Miller Pierce American, 1918-2007 Two Works- Spire No. 3 and Spire No. 4 each: resin 1988; signed, titled and dated verso

    Abell Auction
  • Florence Miller Pierce, Untitled 545 (Dark Orange), 2001
    Sep. 18, 2024

    Florence Miller Pierce, Untitled 545 (Dark Orange), 2001

    Est: $1,000 - $2,000

    Florence Miller Pierce (1918 - 2007) Untitled 545 (Dark Orange), 2001 resin relief on mirrored plexiglass inscribed verso: Untitled 545 / 8.08.01 16 x 16 / Dark Orange / Florence Pierce

    Santa Fe Art Auction
  • Florence Pierce, District Of Columbia, New Mexico, California (1918 - 2007), untitled #23, 1989, resin on plexiglass, 17 1/4"H x 20 1/2"W x 3/4"D
    Nov. 05, 2022

    Florence Pierce, District Of Columbia, New Mexico, California (1918 - 2007), untitled #23, 1989, resin on plexiglass, 17 1/4"H x 20 1/2"W x 3/4"D

    Est: $800 - $1,200

    Florence Pierce District Of Columbia, New Mexico, California, (1918 - 2007) untitled #23, 1989 resin on plexiglass signed, titled and dated verso. Provenance: Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, New Mexico. Damage / restoration in two corners. Biography from the Archives of askART: Florence Miller Pierce was known for thought provoking abstract, non-objective, monochromatic painting rooted in her dedication to Zen Buddhism and meditation. Many of her works give the appearance of floating off the wall, something she achieved with richly colored and textured geometric shapes---polygons, triangles, and rectangles---encased in divided layers of transparent resin over colors that had been softened through mixing with with milled fiberglass. Working with resin to create textures occurred for her in 1969 when she 51 years old and was in her New Mexico studio making foam sculpture. A chance spill of resin landed on a piece of aluminum foil, and when it hardened, it 'shimmered', and she was fascinated. Learning that she could create an interesting effect with resin adhering to mirrored tiles, "she would continue with the new body of work for nearly 35 years." (Regan)In 2005, the Tucson Museum of Art held a solo exhibition of work by Florence Miller Pierce, then age 87, and featured were 33 pieces of resin-on-mirror paintings described as "jeweled bits of minimalism, delicately colored and sensuously textured. Sometimes, the thick layers of resin are as pearly and smooth as flesh. Elsewhere, where Pierce has manipulated the resin while it's drying; the layers are dimpled, folded like cloth, or even crumpled like paper. And their forms echo the sculptures that Pierce abandoned when she had her eureka moment. Shaped into squares, arches and triangles, they veer into 3-D, hanging out slightly from the walls and casting shadows in the light." (Regan) She was born with the name Florence Miller in Washington DC, and by age 18, had a serious dedication to art and spiritualism. Her parents ran a private boarding school. From childhood, she was interested in art, and nurtured by an art teacher, May Ashton, she visited museums. Miller studied in DC at the Phillips Gallery and the Corcoran School of Art. Having become aware that Taos, New Mexico was an art center from visiting her grandparents, who lived there, she persuaded her parents to allow her to go alone to Taos in 1936 for a summer to study at the Studio School with Emil Bisttram, who not only was a highly accredited teacher but who also had a dedication to meditation and spiritualism. She returned to Taos in the winter of 1937, and the next year, she returned, at Bisttram's invitation, to take part in the forming of the Transcendental Painting Group (TPG). These founders were nine artists dedicated to abstract art expression, grounded in creative art imagination and the transporting of painting beyond objective recognition. In 1938, they banded together to share ideas and organized mutual exhibition venues that made the public aware of fnon-objective and abstract art. She was the youngest member and outlived all the other members of the organization, which held together for several years until World War II sidetracked their ability to remain a cohesive entity. Four decades later, it was written that her austere, abstract works of art reflecting color, beauty and natural forms, were indeed a synthesis of the teachings of Emil Bisttram who inspired his students with the words "Idea, Shape, Color and Form." Of her work, Pierce reflected that she had been "trying to do the purest work I knokw how. What comes to mind is the Zen word that means original mind, about emptying mind and space." (Regan) Through Bisttram, Florence Miller met Horace Towner Pierce, an art student and one of the founders of TPG, and they married in 1938. He was described as looking like the pipe-smoking movie star, Fred MacMurray. The couple lived in New York and California, where in 1939, she and her husband, along with other members of the Transcendental Painting Group, exhibited at the Golden Gate International Exposition. By 1950, they had settled in Albuquerque. They had two children, one whom died several months after birth. Horace Pierce, age 41, died suddenly in 1958, when Florence was 39. She remained in Albuquerque, continuing her commitment to geometric abstract and non-objective painting and relief sculpture of layered dried pigmented resin. Some viewers regard her artwork as "distillations of the New Mexico landscape" with their "stark geometry and earthy color palette" (Regan) that suggests adobe. However, she was not an artist who did a lot of interacting with other artists as she worked pretty much in isolation and viewed herself as a 'silent artist'. She became a strong admirer of Agnes Martin, the reclusive painter from Taos who was her peer and whose minimalist paintings brought record-breaking prices in New York auction houses. In 2004, Pierce, Martin and the potter, Maria Martinez, were honored in a group show, In Pursuit of Perfection, in Santa Fe at the Museum of Fine Arts. Florence Pierce died at age 90 at her home in Albuquerque on October 25, 2007

    Ripley Auctions
  • FLORENCE MILLER PIERCE, AMERICAN 1918-2007, UNTITLED (BLUE GREEN) 513, Resin relief, 16 x 16 in. (40.64 x 40.64 cm.)
    Apr. 27, 2022

    FLORENCE MILLER PIERCE, AMERICAN 1918-2007, UNTITLED (BLUE GREEN) 513, Resin relief, 16 x 16 in. (40.64 x 40.64 cm.)

    Est: $1,500 - $3,000

    FLORENCE MILLER PIERCE AMERICAN, 1918-2007 UNTITLED (BLUE GREEN) 513 Resin relief Verso inscribed: Untitled 513 / 2.1.01 16 x 16 / Blue Green / Florence Pierce; verso label: Florence Pierce / Untitled 513 (Blue Green), 2.2.01 / Resin Relief / 16 x 16 in. / FP 118; verso gallery label: HS-howard scott gallery, New York New York Note: Born in 1918, Pierce spent her childhood in Washington, D.C., where she was one of the few young women to take art classes at the Phillips Collection's Studio School. At age 18, Pierce convinced her parents to let her study with modernist artist Emil Bisttram in Taos, New Mexico. She became the youngest member of Bisttram's Taos Transcendentalists group, dedicated to the creation of abstract art guided by spirituality. Pierce would spend decades experimenting with different techniques and refining her style. In 1969, a 51-year-old Pierce accidentally spilled some resin on a sheet of aluminum foil and found herself entranced by the way it captured the light. She would dedicate the rest of her career to perfecting this unforeseen new method. In a 2006 New York Times review of Pierce's solo exhibition at the Howard Scott Gallery, Holland Cotter writes, "It took her a lifetime of activity to arrive at art about contemplation, and then she did so only by chance." Pierce passed away in 2007, but the legacy of her minimalist, light-refracting works is enduring. "I can't think of Pierce's work without visualizing that unique glow," writes art critic Lucy Lippard. "Her monochrome resin squares create their own weather."

    Potomack Company
  • FLORENCE PIERCE (1918-2007) Untiteld # 299 (Yellow). Résine sur plex
    Feb. 07, 2021

    FLORENCE PIERCE (1918-2007) Untiteld # 299 (Yellow). Résine sur plex

    Est: €1,000 - €1,500

    FLORENCE PIERCE (1918-2007) Untiteld # 299 (Yellow). Résine sur plexiglass. Signé, daté et titré au dos. Hars op plexiglass. Achteraan gesigneerd, gedateerd en getiteld 41 x 41 cm

    Cornette de Saint-Cyr-Bruxelles
  • FLORENCE PIERCE (1918-2007) Untiteld # 209 (White). Résine sur plexi
    Feb. 07, 2021

    FLORENCE PIERCE (1918-2007) Untiteld # 209 (White). Résine sur plexi

    Est: €1,000 - €1,500

    FLORENCE PIERCE (1918-2007) Untiteld # 209 (White). Résine sur plexiglass. Signé, daté et titré au dos. Hars op plexiglass. Achteraan gesigneerd, gedateerd en getiteld 41 x 41 cm

    Cornette de Saint-Cyr-Bruxelles
  • Florence Miller Pierce (American, 1918 - 2007), sculpture, white square, resin, signed and dated "1992" on verso, 16" x 16". Provena...
    May. 30, 2020

    Florence Miller Pierce (American, 1918 - 2007), sculpture, white square, resin, signed and dated "1992" on verso, 16" x 16". Provena...

    Est: $1,000 - $2,000

    Florence Miller Pierce (American, 1918 - 2007), sculpture, white square, resin, signed and dated "1992" on verso, 16" x 16". Provenance: The Estate of Andrew Wolf, New Haven, CT, Arts Chief.

    Nadeau's Auction Gallery
  • Florence Pierce (American, 1918-2007), Two Works: Untitled #247, 1998, and Untitled #248, 1998, Both titled, dated, and signed "Florenc
    Feb. 07, 2014

    Florence Pierce (American, 1918-2007), Two Works: Untitled #247, 1998, and Untitled #248, 1998, Both titled, dated, and signed "Florenc

    Est: $3,000 - $5,000

    Florence Pierce (American, 1918-2007) Two Works: Untitled #247, 1998, and Untitled #248, 1998 Both titled, dated, and signed "Florence Pierce" in black ink on the reverse, identified on labels from Charlotte Jackson Fine Art, Santa Fe, on the reverse. Resin relief, 16 x 16 in. (40.7 x 40.7 cm), mounted, unframed. Condition: Possibly yellowed, slightly tacky varnish-like substance on the reverse of #247. Provenance: A copy of the exhibition catalog Florence Pierce: A Light-filled Domain, Tucson Museum of Art and Historic Block, Tucson, Arizona, accompanies the lot.

    Skinner
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