It’s a Good Thing: Martha Stewart Just Sent Walter Robinson a Mash Note Over His Bedsheet Paintings

The sheets feature jaunty images of camels.

Walter Robinson, The Executioner Blood Vendetta (2017). © Walter Robinson; courtesy the Artist and Vito Schnabel Gallery.

Beloved New York artist and critic Walter Robinson gained the notice of lifestyle maven Martha Stewart after she saw some of his paintings at Vito Schnabel’s gallery in St. Moritz, Switzerland’s famous holiday resort. She even wrote him a letter praising his paintings on bedsheets, works that combine Robinson’s longstanding love of pulpy book covers and Stewart’s passion for thread counts.

The painting that caught her eye, The Executioner Blood Vendetta (2017), features none other than a sheet from Stewart’s “Whim” collection, featuring a jaunty image of a camel patterned across the cotton percale.

Robinson, a New York legend who was the founding editor of artnet magazine, the precursor to artnet News, posted on Facebook today an image of the one-line letter, which was accompanied by a gift of some of the very same camel sheets he used as a canvas.

Thanks, Martha.

Posted by Walter Robinson on Monday, June 5, 2017

His paintings on bedsheets recall several postwar and contemporary artists’ use of similar materials, including Robert Rauschenberg’s Bed (1955), Tracey Emin’s My Bed (1988), and more recently, Rodney McMillian’s impasto abstractions on bed linens. Robinson, noted perhaps as much for his criticism as for his art making, gained notice in 2014 for his Artspace article “Flipping and the Rise of Zombie Formalism,” which coined a widely adopted catchphrase that describes a current trend in artistic production that “brings back to life the discarded aesthetics of Clement Greenberg.”

Stewart is known to be a fan of contemporary art, having, just for one example, tweeted about her enjoyment of artists like Yayoi Kusama and Robert Therrien while visiting Los Angeles’s Broad Museum.

“I met her once at the Chelsea Hotel on the roof at a cook-out hosted by the artist Sheila Berger,” Robinson told artnet News. “I said to her, ‘I watch your show while on the treadmill at the gym,’ which was true. She seemed to like that.”


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