Nancy Grossman
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Nancy Grossman

United States • 1940

Biography

Nancy Grossman, born in 1940 in New York, is a pioneering American artist known for her powerful leather-bound wooden head sculptures that confront themes of identity, gender, and psychological tension. Raised in Oneonta and trained in sewing and pattern-making in her parents' garment shop, she later earned a BFA from Pratt Institute under Richard Lindner, debuting her first solo show in 1962. Her early mastery of materials—leather, wood, metal, and textiles—defined a singular aesthetic blending craftsmanship and conceptual rigor.

Her iconic head sculptures, begun in 1968, challenge binary views of gender through masculine features and physical restraint, often read as symbolic self-portraits. Grossman received major recognition, including fellowships from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation. Her work has been exhibited at MoMA, the Whitney, LACMA, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum, with retrospectives like Tough Life Diary at the Tang Teaching Museum in 2012 affirming her influence.

Now based in Brooklyn, Grossman continues to create work that defies convention and probes the limits of the human experience. Her pieces remain highly sought after in the art market for their bold materiality, psychological depth, and enduring relevance in contemporary discourse.

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When was Nancy Grossman born?
The year of birth of the artist is: 1940