Mimi Herbert (b. 1936) is an American painter and sculptor who gained prominence among Washington Color School artists in the 1970s with her striking experimentations with minimalist geometric shapes and bold color. As a minimalist artist, Herbert expresses purity of form and color in her reductionist compositions. Over the decades, Herbert has refined her style, form and medium in ever-changing ways, securing her place in American art history as a pioneering woman sculptor. In the summer of 2022, Mimi Herbert’s sculpture Red Triplet (1974) was re-installed in the stunning new Atrium in the National Gallery of Art. The sculpture stands out in the airy space with monumental works by Roy Lichtenstein, Jean Dubuffet, and Hans Hoffman. Previously installed in the Minimalism gallery, it was surrounded by Anne Truitt, Sol Le Witt, Frank Stella, and David Novros. At the direction of Harry Cooper, the sculpture was moved to its current, more prominent site. The Corcoran Gallery of Art received the work in 1974, and upon closing its doors, the NGA chose the piece for its permanent collection. Born in Brooklyn in 1936 to immigrant parents, Herbertʼs family settled in Arlington, VA. She developed a love of drawing and theater at Syracuse University. Post-graduation Herbert studied Indian art and language and eventually worked with bronze while living in the USA, India and then Pakistan. As bronze became harder to obtain, Herbert shifted her medium to Uvex, a pliable clear plastic that she could shape and vacuum form.
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