Julie Umerle


Julie Umerle is an American-born abstract painter who lives and works in London.

Biography

Umerle was born in Connecticut USA and relocated to London with her family as a young child.
She studied French Literature at the University of Sussex and fine art at Falmouth University where she was awarded a First class Hons degree. From 1991 - 1996, Umerle worked as an artist educator at a number of London galleries including The Whitechapel Gallery, The Hayward Gallery and The Royal Academy. She graduated from Parsons The New School for Design with a MFA in 1998; then lived and worked between London and New York for a further five years after completing her studies, before returning to the UK and settling again in London in 2003.

Exhibitions

Umerle has exhibited widely in London and the UK in solo and group exhibitions, and also internationally including the USA, China, France and Germany.
In 1980, she held her first solo exhibition at a squat in Frestonia's Car Breaker Gallery in London followed a few years later by 'Ten Years of Painting' at The Barbican Arts Centre.
Herbert Art Gallery and Museum hosted Umerle's first UK solo museum exhibition in 1995 including works such as Paragon, Flock and Wrap.
Group exhibitions include shows at Royal Academy of Arts, Flowers Gallery, Maidstone Museum & Art Gallery, Huddersfield Art Gallery, Jiangsu Art Gallery and Metro Pictures Gallery. Recent solo exhibitions include 'Rewind' at Bermondsey Project Space, London and 'Cosmos or Chaos' at studio1.1, London.
In 2019 she was published in Aesthetica Magazine's '100 Contemporary Artists 2019' printed Anthology.

Work

Umerle paints in series that are open-ended, exploring similarity, repetition and difference within each group of work, making work that explores the materiality of paint and the processes of abstract painting. Her practice is an investigation of materials and the perception of the image. Engaged in a process that explores the act of painting itself, she works on a variety of supports. Her paintings "exist at the meeting point of decision and accident", making the viewer aware of the trail of the brush, the pressure of the artist's hand and the degree to which one mark can differ under varying circumstances, setting up conditions for chance and responding to the natural physicality of paint itself.
Of her work, British artist and art historian Simon Morley has written:
"Her paintings evoke a feeling of suspension, as if what we see is a held or frozen moment within an ongoing process. This sense of simplicity is achieved through an enormous process of condensation, resulting in a level of clarity and unity that permeates the work."
Her paintings are held in public and private collections including The Deutsche Bank Collection, The Connaught, Madison Museum of Fine Art and Swindon Art Gallery.

Awards and recognition

Umerle has received numerous awards and grants for her work, including the Greater London Arts award, four awards from Arts Council England, an award from the Adolph and Esther Gottlieb Foundation and an award from London Arts Board.

Publications