Medrie MacPhee (born 1953) is a Canadian-American painter based in New York City.
[Fateman, Johanna]
"Medrie MacPhee,"
''The New Yorker'', March 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2021.[Wayne, Leslie]
"Comfort Clothing for Fraught Times: Medrie MacPhee in conversation with Leslie Wayne,"
''Artcritical'', July 20, 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2021. She works in distinct painting and drawing series that have explored the juncture of abstraction and representation, relationships between architecture, machines, technology and human evolution, and states of flux and transformation.
[Berlind, Robert. "Medrie MacPhee at 49th Parallel," ''Art In America'', April 1989, p. 264.][Johnson, Ken. "Medrie MacPhee at Baldacci Daverio," ''Art In America'', July 1993, p. 108.][Goodman, Jonathan. "Medrie MacPhee and Amy Sillman," ''Contemporary Visual Arts'', January 1999, p. 50–5.][Dault, Gary Michael. "To Know or Not to Know: That is The Question," ''The Globe and Mail'', November 4, 2006, p. R12.] In the 1990s and 2000s, she gained attention for metaphorical paintings of industrial subjects and organic-machine and bio-technological forms.
[Clarkson, David. "Medrie MacPhee," ''Canadian Art'', Summer 1993, p. 80–3.][Wilkin, Karen. "At The Galleries," ''Partisan Review'', Vol. LXIII, No. 1, 1996.][Laurence, Robin. "Medrie MacPhee in conversation with Robin Laurence”, ''Canadian Art'', Summer 1999, p. 46–9.][Hanna, Deidre. "Surreal Deal," ''Now'' (Toronto), April 18–24, 2001.] In later work, she explored architectural instability before turning to semiotically dense canvases combining compartments of color and collaged pieces of garments fit together like puzzles, which ''New York Times'' critic
Roberta Smith
Roberta Smith (born 1948) is co-chief art critic of ''The New York Times'' and a lecturer on contemporary art. She is the first woman to hold that position.
Early life
Born in 1948 in New York City and raised in Lawrence, Kansas. Smith studied ...
described as "powerfully flat, more literal than abstract" with "an adamant, witty physicality."
[Kee, Christina]
"Hybrid 'Futuristic Species': The latest from Medrie MacPhee,"
''Artcritical'', July 6, 2010. Retrieved August 30, 2021.[Maine, Stephen]
"The Clothes Make the Painting,"
''Hyperallergic'', July 8, 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2021.[Smith, Roberta]
''The New York Times'', February 17, 2021, p. C7. Retrieved August 30, 2021.
MacPhee has received a
Guggenheim Fellowship
Guggenheim Fellowships are grants that have been awarded annually since by the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation to those "who have demonstrated exceptional capacity for productive scholarship or exceptional creative ability in the ar ...
[''Artforum'']
"Guggenheim Fellows Announced,"
News, April 10, 2009. Retrieved August 30, 2021. and awards from the
Pollock-Krasner Foundation
The Pollock-Krasner Foundation was established in 1985 for the purpose of providing financial assistance to individual working artists of established ability. It was established at the bequest of Lee Krasner, who was an American abstract expression ...
,
[Selvin, Claire]
"Pollock-Krasner Foundation Names Winners of $3 M. in Grants,"
''ARTnews'', April 17, 2019. Retrieved August 30, 2021. Anonymous Was a Woman
"Anonymous Was a Woman" is the fourth episode of the eleventh season of the American police procedural drama ''NCIS'', and the 238th episode overall. It originally aired on CBS in the United States on October 15, 2013. The episode is written b ...
,
[Anonymous Was a Woman]
2017 Winners: Medrie MacPhee
Retrieved August 30, 2021. National Endowment for the Arts
The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is an independent agency of the United States federal government that offers support and funding for projects exhibiting artistic excellence. It was created in 1965 as an independent agency of the federa ...
and
American Academy of Arts and Letters
The American Academy of Arts and Letters is a 300-member honor society whose goal is to "foster, assist, and sustain excellence" in American literature, music, and art. Its fixed number membership is elected for lifetime appointments. Its headq ...
, among others.
[John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation]
Medrie MacPhee
Fellows. Retrieved August 30, 2021.[''Hyperallergic'']
"The American Academy of Arts and Letters Presents the 2020 Invitational Exhibition of Visual Arts,"
March 3, 2020. Retrieved August 30, 2021. Her work belongs to public art collections including the
Metropolitan Museum of Art
The Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York City, colloquially "the Met", is the largest art museum in the Americas. Its permanent collection contains over two million works, divided among 17 curatorial departments. The main building at 100 ...
,
[Metropolitan Museum of Art]
''Disk Study''
Collection. Retrieved September 9, 2021. National Gallery of Canada
The National Gallery of Canada (french: Musée des beaux-arts du Canada), located in the capital city of Ottawa, Ontario, is Canada's national art museum. The museum's building takes up , with of space used for exhibiting art. It is one of the ...
,
[National Gallery of Canada]
Medrie MacPhee
Collection, Artist. Retrieved September 9, 2021. and
Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal
The Musée d'art contemporain de Montréal (MACM) is a contemporary art museum in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is located on the Place des festivals in the Quartier des spectacles and is part of the Place des Arts complex.
Founded in 1964, it is ...
.
[Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal]
" Painting Nature with a Mirror,"
Exhibitions. Retrieved September 9, 2021. She has taught at
Bard College
Bard College is a private liberal arts college in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. The campus overlooks the Hudson River and Catskill Mountains, and is within the Hudson River Historic District—a National Historic Landmark.
Founded in 18 ...
,
Columbia University
Columbia University (also known as Columbia, and officially as Columbia University in the City of New York) is a private research university in New York City. Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Church in Manha ...
,
Cooper Union
The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art (Cooper Union) is a private college at Cooper Square in New York City. Peter Cooper founded the institution in 1859 after learning about the government-supported École Polytechnique in ...
,
Rhode Island School of Design
The Rhode Island School of Design (RISD , pronounced "Riz-D") is a private art and design school in Providence, Rhode Island. The school was founded as a coeducational institution in 1877 by Helen Adelia Rowe Metcalf, who sought to increase the ...
and
Sarah Lawrence College
Sarah Lawrence College is a private liberal arts college in Yonkers, New York. The college models its approach to education after the Oxford/Cambridge system of one-on-one student-faculty tutorials. Sarah Lawrence scholarship, particularly i ...
.
[Butler, Sharon]
"Interview: Medrie MacPhee in Ridgewood,"
''Two Coats of Paint'', March 17, 2016. Retrieved August 30, 2021.
Early life and career
MacPhee was born in
Edmonton
Edmonton ( ) is the capital city of the Canadian province of Alberta. Edmonton is situated on the North Saskatchewan River and is the centre of the Edmonton Metropolitan Region, which is surrounded by Alberta's central region. The city anc ...
,
Alberta
Alberta ( ) is one of the thirteen provinces and territories of Canada. It is part of Western Canada and is one of the three prairie provinces. Alberta is bordered by British Columbia to the west, Saskatchewan to the east, the Northwest Ter ...
in 1953 and studied art at
Nova Scotia College of Art and Design
NSCAD University, also known as the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design or NSCAD, is a public art university in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada. The university is a co-educational institution that offers bachelor's and master's degrees. The univ ...
.
[Freedman, Adele. "Medrie MacPhee’s Industrial Poetics," ''Canadian Art'', Fall 1989.] During a class trip to New York City in 1976, she was drawn to the city's number of women artists and deteriorating, evolving urban environment and soon arranged to study there through an exchange program.
[Enright, Robert. "Ungrounding Science: Medrie MacPhee’s Meditations on Survival," ''Border Crossings'', Summer 2001, p. 80–6.][Hunt, Stephan]
"Fictional Spaces,"
''The Calgary Herald'', December 12, 2014. Retrieved August 30, 2021. After earning her BFA later that year, she permanently moved to New York, working a series of odd jobs while producing art out of various studios in Manhattan before settling in a Bowery loft studio from 1990 to 2013.
In New York, the subject matter of her painting shifted from portraits to industrial architecture exploring relationships between structures, the body and human evolution.
She received critical attention for these urban paintings beginning in the later 1980s, through solo exhibitions at 49th Parallel (1988)
[Sturman, John. "Medrie MacPhee, 49th Parallel," ''ARTnews'', June, 1989.] Phillipe Daverio Gallery (1991)
[Cohen, Ronny]
"Medrie MacPhee,"
''Artforum'', October 1991, p. 127. Retrieved August 30, 2021.[Wilkin, Karen. "At The Galleries," ''Partisan Review'', Vol. LVIII, No. 3, 1991, p. 533–40.] and Paolo Baldacci Gallery (1992–7) in New York,
Concordia University
Concordia University (French: ''Université Concordia'') is a public research university located in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1974 following the merger of Loyola College and Sir George Williams University, Concordia is one of the th ...
(Montreal, 1988),
[Lehmann, Henry. "Poetry In Ruins: MacPhee’s Luminous Art," ''Daily News'' (Montreal), 1988.] and Mira Godard Gallery (Toronto, 1988, 1990).
[Hart, Matthew. "Focus on Medrie MacPhee," ''Canadian Art'', Spring 1989, p.103.]
Work and reception
MacPhee's work has moved from metaphorical industrial and imagined landscapes through hybrid mixes of representation, abstraction, biology and technology to more abstract works that nonetheless incorporate real-world objects and allusion.
[Mackay, Gillian, "Luscious paint, cast-off photos and enigmatic tableaus”, ''The Globe and Mail'', June 19, 1999.][Wilkin, Karen]
"At the Galleries,"
''Hudson Review'', Summer 2006, p. 273–80. Retrieved August 30, 2021.[Gopnik, Blake]
"Medrie MacPhee Paints with a Tailor’s Shears,"
''Artnet'', June 20, 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2021. Despite her work's range, critics have identified several unifying themes: an anthropomorphizing impulse that examines how the built and machine worlds mirror psychological states; interest in processes of disintegration, metamorphosis or evolution; exploration of the past as a pointer to the future; open-ended meaning; and humor.
[Bellerby, Greg. ''Medrie MacPhee'', Vancouver, BC: Charles H. Scott Gallery, 1999.][Laurence, Robin. "MacPhee Meditates on Modernism’s Failings," ''The Georgia Straight'' (Vancouver), March 11–8, 1999.][Goodman, Jonathan. "Medrie MacPhee at Michael Steinberg," ''Art In America'', May 2006, p. 192.] In formal terms, these themes translate into her use of collage, attention to the expressive qualities of materials and painted surfaces, and ambiguous, often disorienting uses of space and scale.
[Lehmann, Henry. "Artist Animates Life’s Nuts and Bolts," ''Gazette'' (Montreal), May 1, 1999.]
"Industrial" series
MacPhee's early industrial paintings presented enigmatic, sometimes fantastical exteriors of abandoned structures and aging machinery drawn from the decaying industrial environment of New York and Montreal's harbor front: silos, water towers, holding tanks, viaducts, conveyers, conduits, container piers.
The paintings emphasized draftsmanship—with lines and hard edges defining large modeled volumes—as well as varied surfaces of dry, scraped areas, thin turpentine washes and sewn-on canvas, dramatic shifts between close-ups and vast expanse, and
chiaroscuro
Chiaroscuro ( , ; ), in art, is the use of strong contrast (vision), contrasts between light and dark, usually bold contrasts affecting a whole composition. It is also a technical term used by artists and art historians for the use of contrasts ...
lighting evoking a poignant, forlorn quality.
''Artforums Ronnie Cohen described MacPhee's approach as part objective and part romantic, with imagination informing "fascinating transfigurations of things, imbuing them with a vital anthropomorphism."
Critics made comparisons to the somber metaphysical works of
Giorgio de Chirico
Giuseppe Maria Alberto Giorgio de Chirico ( , ; 10 July 1888 – 20 November 1978) was an Italian
artist and writer born in Greece. In the years before World War I, he founded the '' scuola metafisica'' art movement, which profoundly influ ...
and
Edward Hopper
Edward Hopper (July 22, 1882 – May 15, 1967) was an American realism, American realist painter and printmaker. While he is widely known for his oil paintings, he was equally proficient as a watercolor painting, watercolorist and printmaker in e ...
and visionary scenes of
Piranesi
Giovanni Battista (or Giambattista) Piranesi (; also known as simply Piranesi; 4 October 1720 – 9 November 1778) was an Italian Classical archaeologist, architect, and artist, famous for his etchings of Rome and of fictitious and atmospheric " ...
, reading these paintings as metaphors for the female body, nature or human development (e.g., ''Self-Portrait in the Mountains'', 1986; ''Frida’s Garden'', 1990), which examined relationships between man and machine, obsolescence, survival and the exhaustion of
modernist
Modernism is both a philosophy, philosophical and arts movement that arose from broad transformations in Western world, Western society during the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The movement reflected a desire for the creation of new fo ...
utopianism.
''Art in Americas Robert Berlind wrote that MacPhee "invert(ed) the post-
Cubist
Cubism is an early-20th-century avant-garde art movement that revolutionized European painting and sculpture, and inspired related movements in music, literature and architecture. In Cubist artwork, objects are analyzed, broken up and reassemble ...
tradition of abstracted, machine-like figuration," finding life, sexuality and "the pathos of extinction" in industrial relics (e.g., ''Dinosaurs'' and ''Siamese Twins'', 1987).
Painting series (1992–2011)
In the 1990s, MacPhee employed a more allusive mix of representation and abstraction—as well as humor—in bodies of work that alternately evoked watery environments, whirlwinds of fragmented organic-mechanical components, and imaginary future species.
[Hanna, Deidre. "Industrial landscapes show emotion," ''Now'' (Toronto), September 10, 1992.][Goodman, Jonathan. "Medrie MacPhee," ''Canadian Art'', Spring 1996, p. 96.] "The Floating World" series (1992–3) explored dissolving boundaries between nature, machine and body in scenes suggesting growth or renewal from within ambiguous interior structures.
They employed vertically rising, reassembled forms prefigured in the industrial works, which shifted disconcertingly between mechanical and organic: gears and lily pads, wires and vines, springs and tendrils (e.g., ''The Music of Spheres'', 1992).
''Art in America'' critic
Ken Johnson termed them illuminated "underwater forests" projecting "an impressionistic naturalism" and "otherworldly numinous quality";
''Canadian Art'' described them as "futuristic cities with mile-high spires and disc-like jetcopter pads," whose visual and poetic effects were "luminous and oddly languid."
MacPhee turned to oversized gouache and charcoal drawings collaged and mounted on canvas in the "Flight in the Variable Zone" series (1995–7). Its patchworks depicted free-falling, idiosyncratic elements—gaskets, gears, pumps and pulleys—seemingly swept up and reworked into new forms by whirlwinds or vortices.
Like the "Floating" works, they employ a subdued radiance and spatial shifts between miniature and monumental.
Critics suggested the series conveyed a sense of social disintegration and eclipsed functionality, as well as new possibility;
[Drucker, Johanna. "Images of a Displaced Past: Michael Flanagan and Medrie MacPhee," ''Art Journal'', Summer 1996.] Karen Wilkin
Karen Wilkin (born 1940) is a New York-based independent curator and art critic specializing in 20th-century modernism.
Biography
Educated at Barnard College (1962) and Columbia University, she was awarded a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship and a Fulbrig ...
likened its fragility and lyricism to
da Vinci
Leonardo di ser Piero da Vinci (15 April 14522 May 1519) was an Italian polymath of the High Renaissance who was active as a painter, draughtsman, engineer, scientist, theorist, sculptor, and architect. While his fame initially rested on hi ...
's diagrammatic machine drawings, which mix engineering, anatomical and botanical elements.
MacPhee extended her interest in metamorphosis with the "Unnatural Selection" series (1997–2001), marrying technology and biology to imagine outlandish, possibly engineered successors to humanity.
[Johnson, Ken]
Review, "Pushing Paint,"
''The New York Times'', September 14, 2001. Retrieved August 30, 2021. The series recombines her vocabulary into visceral, hybrid forms such as bellows, riveted cones, spindles, hoops and organs, set in vague, garishly colored vistas, often amid tubes suggesting blood vessels (e.g., ''Hot Spot'' and ''Chop Suey'', 1998).
[Peden, Paul. "It’s the New Thing," ''Miser and Now'', November, 2003, p. 1–8.] She painted them in vinyl polymer, taking advantage of its hardness, matte opacity and artificial color to shift from her earlier atmospherics to more directly experienced painting spaces influenced by Italian frescoes.
This directness extended to the viewer's emotional identification with her composited forms, which functioned like characters burdened by human feelings, personalities and situations.
[Sillman, Amy. "Excerpts from a Conversation Between Amy Sillman and Medrie MacPhee," ''Words Fail Me: Medrie MacPhee'', New York: Tibor de Nagy, 2021.] Reviews sometimes compared the series' spaces to surrealist work and their affect—an absurdist mix of vulnerability, exhaustion, erotics, grim humor and survival reflecting the modern fragmentation of life—to work by
Philip Guston
Philip Guston (born Phillip Goldstein, June 27, 1913 – June 7, 1980), was a Canadian American painter, printmaker, muralist and draftsman. Early in his five decade career, muralist David Siquieros described him as one of "the most promising ...
.
In the 2000s, MacPhee's paintings took on a more dislocated, architectural character in which she upended visual cues for locations and habitations as if they were floating or exploding in space, victims of a disaster or cosmic reordering.
Critics described them as destabilizing, irrational, hybridized approximations of reality whose meaning was obscure; for example, ''Treasure Island'' (2006) suggests something more like a platform, hovering over a swimming pool or lake of half-built structures and an unexplained clutter of spools, planks, frames and cloth.
In her exhibition "What It Is" (2010), MacPhee piled the shapes and futuristic species of earlier works ''en masse'' in large, dense paintings that Christina Kee of ''Artcritical'' described as colliding, overlapping scenes of barely controlled, abstract/figurative abundance pushed to a point of compositional near-breakdown (e.g., ''Float'' 2009; ''Big Bang'' 2010).
She wrote, "The seemingly discrete parts that make up these works have clear and specific characteristics … yet remain unidentifiable as any known object outside their painted world," referring to the forms as "real, raw materials in a pre-named state." She concluded that the laboratory-like experimentation of MacPhee's earlier work had given way to "a powerful response to human-scaled questions of construction, anxiety, momentum and collapse."
Collaged clothing works (2012– )
In 2012, MacPhee made a significant departure by collaging disassembled and flattened pieces of clothing onto her oil canvasses.
[Butler, Sharon]
"Medrie MacPhee: Flat-out at Tibor de Nagy,"
''Two Coats of Paint'', June 17, 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2021. The strategy developed out of bespoke hats and garments that she had stitched together for friends from casual castoff clothing fragments.
The paintings employ broad, blocky areas of a single hue—alternately solid, brushy or wiped to a pale transparency—and tactile, rugged surfaces.
The color compartments are punctuated by common garment details (pockets, zippers, puffy seams, buttons) that function abstractly and as recognizable objects and references to the body.
She showed this work in a 2015 group show at the American Academy of Arts and Letters and exhibitions at Tibor de Nagy Gallery ("Scavenge," 2017; "Words Fail Me," 2021, New York) and Nicholas Metivier Gallery (Toronto, 2020).
[''The New Yorker'']
"Goings on About Town: Medrie MacPhee,"
July 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2021. "Scavenge" included transitional paintings such as ''Big Blue'' and ''Out of Pocket'' (both 2016), which combined her earlier architecturally unstable forms with a flatter, recessive space created by the collaged elements.
Those works gave way to tauter compositions fitting color blocks and collaged garments like irregular puzzle pieces—now extending edge to edge—that she plotted out with welted seams, piping or belt-looped waistbands painted white (e.g., ''A Dream of Peace,'' 2017).
In ''Take Me to the River'' (2020), an overlay of quasi-topographical white lines over a surface of oceanic blue suggests fragmented circuitry or a sparsely lit night terrain seen from above; ''Favela'' evokes those chaotic architectures through blocks of mustard, crimson, burgundy and blue divided by white vertical waistbands, like ladders.
[Stevenson, Jonathan]
''Two Coats of Paint'', February 14, 2021. Retrieved August 30, 2021.
Critics such as Stephen Maine described these later paintings as dense with references to gender, art history, the origin of clothing in two-dimensional patterns, and the textile nature of canvas.
For example, the playful, risqué work ''A New Shape in Town'' (2020) depicts a pink oblong shape impinging on a dark blue central cavity of denim, suggesting sex, and perhaps, sexual predation.
Sharon Butler wrote that while the paintings can appear to be purely formal, abstract investigations of shape and line, MacPhee's aesthetic choices and creative destruction of once-utilitarian items reveal social themes of instability, danger and collective despair.
Recognition
MacPhee has received a Guggenheim Fellowship (2009),
awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters (2020, 2015)
and Anonymous Was a Woman (2016),
and grants from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation (2018),
Canada Council
The Canada Council for the Arts (french: Conseil des arts du Canada), commonly called the Canada Council, is a Crown corporation established in 1957 as an arts council of the Government of Canada. It acts as the federal government's principal in ...
, National Endowment for the Arts and
New York Foundation for the Arts
The New York Foundation for the Arts (NYFA) is an independent 501(c)(3) charity, funded through government, foundation, corporate, and individual support, established in 1971. It is part of a network of national not-for-profit arts organization ...
, among other recognition.
She has been an artist resident at institutions including the Bogliasco Foundation (Italy), Bau Institute (France),
Vermont Studio Center
The Vermont Studio Center (VSC) is a non-profit arts organization located in the town of Johnson, Vermont. It conducts the largest fine arts and writing residency program in the United States, with a significant population of international artis ...
,
American Academy in Rome
The American Academy in Rome is a research and arts institution located on the Gianicolo (Janiculum Hill) in Rome.
The academy is a member of the Council of American Overseas Research Centers.
History
In 1893, a group of American architects ...
and
MacDowell.
[Bogliasco Foundation]
Testimonials
Fellows. Retrieved September 9, 2021.[Bau Institute]
BAU Institute Fellows And Participants
Retrieved September 9, 2021.[Macdowell Colony]
Medrie MacPhee
Artists. Retrieved September 9, 2021. Her work belongs to private and public art collections including those of the Metropolitan Museum of Art,
National Gallery of Canada,
Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal,
Art Gallery of Alberta
The Art Gallery of Alberta (AGA) is an art museum in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The museum occupies a building at Churchill Square in downtown Edmonton. The museum building was originally designed by Donald G. Bittorf, and B. James Wensley, alth ...
,
Art Gallery of Ontario
The Art Gallery of Ontario (AGO; french: Musée des beaux-arts de l'Ontario) is an art museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The museum is located in the Grange Park neighbourhood of downtown Toronto, on Dundas Street West between McCaul and Be ...
,
Art Gallery of Greater Victoria
The Art Gallery of Greater Victoria (AGGV) is an art museum located in Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. Situated in Rockland, Victoria, the museum occupies a building complex; made up of the Spencer Mansion, and the Exhibition Galleries. The ...
,
[Art Gallery of Greater Victoria]
Medrie MacPhee
Collection. Retrieved September 9, 2021. Asheville Art Museum The Asheville Art Museum is a community-based nonprofit visual art organization in Western North Carolina (WNC) and is accredited by the American Alliance of Museums. The Museum is located on the center square of downtown Asheville, 2 South Pack Squ ...
,
Canada Council
The Canada Council for the Arts (french: Conseil des arts du Canada), commonly called the Canada Council, is a Crown corporation established in 1957 as an arts council of the Government of Canada. It acts as the federal government's principal in ...
Art Bank,
[Canada Council for the Arts Art Bank]
Medrie MacPhee
Artist. Retrieved September 9, 2021. National Academy of Art and Design,
Palmer Museum of Art
The Palmer Museum of Art is the art museum of Pennsylvania State University, located on the University Park campus in State College, Pennsylvania.
Collections
The museum has an increasing permanent collection of more than 7,000 works. The colle ...
,
[Palmer Museum of Art]
''Sliver'', Medrie MacPhee
Collection. Retrieved September 9, 2021. and Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art.
[Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art]
''Amulet''
Objects. Retrieved September 20, 2021.
References
External links
Medrie MacPheeofficial website
Medrie MacPhee in conversation with Leslie Wayne ''Artcritical'', 2017
''Two Coats of Paint'', 2016
Medrie MacPhee Tibor de Nagy
Medrie MacPhee Nicholas Metivier
{{DEFAULTSORT:MacPhee, Medrie
1953 births
Living people
Canadian women painters
Artists from Edmonton
20th-century American painters
21st-century American painters
20th-century Canadian painters
21st-century Canadian painters
21st-century American women painters
20th-century American women painters
21st-century Canadian women artists
20th-century Canadian women artists