JULIE GREEN

Julie Green (1961-2021) often wrote that they wanted to be a stewardess until age four, but became a painter instead. Green worked in a variety of mediums but identified primarily as a painter, often combining humble materials and techniques with art historical traditions, as in Fashion Plate, a series of paintings on carefully prepared paper plates; or in My New Blue Friends, which Green airbrushed with egg tempera on panel. Green painted on linens, Tyvek, and Chinet-brand plates as well as paper and canvas, with pigments from sources as diverse as industrial waste byproducts, rare earth elements and 7UP.

From 2000 till shortly before their death, Green worked (usually in the winter months) on The Last Supper, a series of paintings on second-hand plates depicting the last meal requests of death row prisoners. A few weeks before their death, Green decided to end the project at 1,000 plates. The first 800 plates are currently on view at the Bellevue Arts Museum in Bellevue, Washington. Green’s related, more recent body of work, First Meal, will be exhibited in New York and New Jersey in 2022. A mid-career overview of Julie Green’s work recently exhibited in Flown Blue at the American Museum of Ceramic Art. The survey included a current iteration of The Last Supper alongside painting series First Meal, Fashion Plate, and My New Blue Friends.

Awarded a 2017 Hallie Ford Fellowship in the Visual Arts from The Ford Family Foundation, Green’s many accolades also included a 2017 Career Opportunity Grant and 2016 Fellowship from the Oregon Arts Commission, the 2015 ArtPrize 3-D Juried Award, and 2011 Joan Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors Grant. Green’s final public exhibition in their lifetime, at The Armory Show in New York in 2020, garnered the Presents Booth Prize. Green’s work was featured in The New York Times, a Whole Foods mini-documentary, Rolling Stone, PBS, Ceramics Monthly, Gastronomica, and 7th edition of A World of Art published by Prentice Hall, and in museums and galleries throughout the United States and internationally.

Green lived in the Willamette Valley with partner and artist Clay Lohmann, and was a professor at Oregon State University.

Obituary of Julie Green (The Washington Post)