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December 2003

A conversation with William Bailey

by William Bailey

MARK STRAND: What was the art like in the late sixties and seventies when you were first showing in New York?

WILLIAM BAILEY: Many different things were happening—there was pop art, conceptual art, and minimal art, photo realism had started out, and there was the beginning of some recognition of straight figurative painting—that is, painting that isn’t based on photography, but is based either on direct observation or memory. Around that time, in the late sixties, Gabriel Laderman wrote an article called “Unconventional Realists” in Artforum, and he identified a group, which was really not a group at all, but some painters that he was aware of, who were working figuratively. At the same time, Sidney Tillim had organized a realist show (which I was not in) and had also written some pieces for Artforum, which I thought were very interesting and on the mark. In ’68, I had my first show at Robert Shoe ...

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William Bailey, the well-known figurative painter taught for many years at the Yale School of Art and Architecture
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This article originally appeared in The New Criterion, Volume 22 December 2003, on page 17
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