Richard Rezac (born in 1952, Nebraska) has created an exquisite and elegant object composed in a purely restored form; his inspiration is partly emotional with architectural and design details It was born from an encounter. Artists of the post minimalist at that time are closely related. The human body is scaled, installed on a wall, suspended from the ceiling, or placed on the floor, Rezac's sculpture opens up a shape that reflects the viewer's close-ups and reflections. The surfaces of lacquered and natural wood, aluminum and bronze contain subtle details and reveal that the original sculpture is actually handmade. Richard Rezac received the prestigious award including the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Scholarship, the Joan Mitchell Foundation Award, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award, and the Roman American Academy's Rome Scholarship. He is exhibiting at the Chicago Art Museum, the Contemporary Art Museum in Chicago, the Yale University Art Museum, the Aspen Museum, and the Portland Art Museum. Public collections include the Chicago Art Museum, the Dallas Museum of Art, the Portland Art Museum, the Detroit Art Museum and the University of Chicago Smart Museum. Rezac lives in Chicago, Illinois and has sculptures, paintings and graduate consultants at the Chicago Art Museum (SAIC).
Richard Rezac lives in Chicago. His sculpture is on display at home and abroad. It is a work especially at the 2006 Portland Art Museum. Currently I am enrolled in James Harris Gallery, Seattle (2017), DePaul Art Museum, Chicago (2016), Galerie Isabella Bortolozzi, Berlin (2015), Marc Foxx, Los Angeles (2015), and Rhona Hoffman Gallery (2014) I will. The exhibition Rezac received a scholarship from the Guggenheim Foundation, the Joan Mitchell Foundation and the Tiffany Foundation and in 2006 was awarded the Rome Award from the American Academy of Rome. He is an associate professor at the Chicago Art Museum.
Richard Rezac (born in 1952, Nebraska) has created an exquisite and elegant object composed in a purely restored form; his inspiration is partly emotional with architectural and design details It was born from an encounter. Artists of the post minimalist at that time are closely related. The human body is scaled, installed on a wall, suspended from the ceiling, or placed on the floor, Rezac's sculpture opens up a shape that reflects the viewer's close-ups and reflections. The surfaces of lacquered and natural wood, aluminum and bronze contain subtle details and reveal that the original sculpture is actually handmade. Richard Rezac received the prestigious award including the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Scholarship, the Joan Mitchell Foundation Award, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award, and the Roman American Academy's Rome Scholarship. He is exhibiting at the Chicago Art Museum, the Contemporary Art Museum in Chicago, the Yale University Art Museum, the Aspen Museum, and the Portland Art Museum.