Dorothy Tanner Bio

Bio of Dorothy Tanner (Jan. 30, 1923 – July 23, 2020)

Visit Remembrance of Dorothy Tribute Page

Dorothy Tanner sitting on a chair at the Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery

   

“Light has the power to create, define, and solidify; or leave in shadow that which we believe to be real.”

“The major challenge for me in art is to keep under control the tyranny of a logical mind. The spirit that moves me is capricious, unruly and irreverent. Most of my work  grows out of intuitive impulse–the rest gets underway by just playing.”
– Dorothy Tanner

 

The following was written in the recommendation section of the Lumonics Facebook page, and we were all deeply touched by this, especially Dorothy:

The artist who creates these pieces is so charming and fun. She was born around the time of the Depression, but her work will do anything but. Her pieces are created using acrylic plastic which is manipulated using heat. The led lights she uses are carefully selected to ensure they play off, and with the sculpture. She loves color and the combinations she selects always ensure the piece still has a fun, sometimes whimsical, and interesting story to tell. If you ever have a chance to see one of Dorothy’s art gallery openings, you will never look at art the same. Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery is the place where an artist can find inspiration and everyone else can become consumed within it.
– Mandi S.

 

Dorothy Tanner was born in The Bronx, NY in 1923. She studied woodcarving  with Chaim Gross at the Educational Alliance, sculpture with Aaron Goodleman at the Jefferson School of Social Science, and was a student of  Gabor Peterdi and Milton Hebald at the Brooklyn Museum Art School. It was at the Brooklyn Museum where she met Mel Tanner and married two years later in 1951.

The Tanners moved to Syracuse, NY where they began the Syracuse Art  Workshop, teaching painting and sculpture. They also taught an art class for children in the summer at Syracuse University. *

In 1963, they returned to New York City and founded an artists’ co-operative, Granite Gallery, on East 57th Street. The Granite Art Association organized  seminars, forums, and exhibitions. “The New Face in Art” Forum took place at the Loeb Center at New York University. Participants included  Louise Nevelson, Red Grooms, Norman Carton, and art writer Gordon Brown.

While experimenting with many materials in her career, Dorothy  found acrylic glass to be the most rewarding. It is a material that she would sculpt, paint, sandblast, bake and shape. Some are wall sculptures, some free-standing or mobiles, while others are water sculptures. Light is an intrinsic element of the art form. LEDs have been the primary source of lighting the works since 2002.

Each sculpture stands alone as an artistic expression, although her interest was to also integrate the works into a total environment — installations that express a powerful visual and emotional sensibility.

Dorothy Tanner and Mel Tanner began their luminal art in Miami in the 1960s, adding the elements of live projection, electronics, and music to create a multi-sensory experience they called Lumonics with the intention  to deeply affect people on physical, emotional, and spiritual levels: to relax, energize, and foster a sense of well-being. **

After the passing of Mel Tanner in 1993, Dorothy collaborated with long-time associate, Marc Billard,  creating  sculptures, electronic music, and video, and continuing to build the Lumonics expression.

Since arriving in Denver in 2008,  light art exhibits have included Union Gallery (DIY collaborative art gallery), VERTIGO Art Space,  the Museum of Outdoor Arts, Denver International Airport, Union Station, The Scarlet (Central City), the Lakewood Art Center, the McNichols Civic Center Building,  the Arts & Culture Center in Thornton, Understudy Gallery in the Denver Theatre District, and Meow Wolf Denver.

Lumonics Then and Now: A Retrospective of Light-Based Sculpture of Dorothy and Mel Tanner, the highly- acclaimed exhibit filled the entire Museum of Outdoor Arts indoor galleries from January to March of
2017. ***

In January of 2018, Dorothy’s  Lumonics Mind Spa opened on the 1st floor of the McNichols Civic Center Building in downtown Denver. It featured light sculptures by  Dorothy and Mel Tanner and music and video by Dorothy Tanner and Marc Billard. Dorothy’s intention for this meditative environment was for everyone to experience new ways to stretch the body, expand the mind, and achieve greater spiritual awareness. One of the highlights was hosting the Americans for the Arts Convention in June. The twice-extended exhibit ended in August, and became the longest running exhibit in the history of the McNichols Building.

Dorothy Tanner was the 2018 recipient of the Mayor’s Arts & Culture Innovation Award for the City and County of Denver, “presented to an individual or organization that is breaking new ground in the arts and whose contribution to innovation in the arts has been significant in 2018.” 

Following Dorothy’s site-specific installation at the  McNichols Building,  she founded the Lumonics School of Light Art. The School offers an innovative hands-on approach to learning light art, and was awarded Westword’s Best of Denver 2019 award.

Dorothy Tanner died peacefully in her sleep on July 23, 2020.

Since her passing, Dorothy and Mel Tanner’s light art was selected as the opening exhibit in The Galleri at Meow Wolf Denver’s Convergence Station.

The Tanner art was also featured at the Understudy Gallery in The Denver Theatre District and was part of the gallery exhibit, Luminaries, at Children’s Hospital Colorado.

The light sculptures are an integral part of Lumonics Immersed which is presented at Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery in Denver.

Memorial Tributes  from the Community

Wikipedia

WikiArt

 

Excerpts from a few articles about Dorothy:

“When Dorothy Tanner dons her rugged work clothes—dungarees, sneaker, sweat shirt, safety glasses and heavy gloves—she isn’t going to work in a foundry. She’s about to use an acetylene torch to heat and bend bits of copper tubing and shapes of brass and steel into art forms. One half of the art team of Mel and  Dorothy Tanner works in metal work sculpture and the other half in oil paintings.” 
– Alice F. Keegan,  “Blow Torch Her ‘Brush’”, The Post-Standard, 1961

“Difficult to describe, beautiful and unusual, the Lumonics Light and Sound Theatre is  hard to compare or judge, comprehend even, because it has no peers. It is different, something unto itself, and not entirely of this world.” 
– Ken Plutnicki,  “Light Show a Theatre of the Mind”, The Miami Herald

“One of the most unusual yet beautiful experiences in the world of art…”
– David Tedeschi, “The Light Fantastic”, The Miami Herald

“When I first encountered the art universe of Mel and Dorothy Tanner in the  current retrospective, my mind leaped ‘back to the future.’ In the hands and liberated minds of these two adventurous artists, the medium of light, as embodied and expressed in their sculptural muses, delights more than our eyes alone can absorb.  As this exhibition demonstrates, the creative spirit transcends virtually everything it makes in revealing itself and engaging us with its revelations!” 
– Todd Siler, artist, educator, and art historian, who discussed the  Retrospective at the Exploring the Denver Art Scene Forum at the  Denver Art Museum in February, 2017.

 

“The eye-dazzling yet somehow relaxing
Lumonics Then & Now: A Retrospective of Light-Based Sculpture by Dorothy & Mel Tanner transforms the interior galleries of the Museum of Outdoor Arts into a world of their own. The spotlights have been dimmed so that the exhibit’s internally lighted transparent acrylic sculptures and wall panels, as well as its projected videos, can glow gently in the near-darkness. A soft electronic soundtrack composed by Dorothy Tanner and her longtime collaborator, Marc Billard, adds yet another soothing aspect to the exhibit.”
– Michael Paglia, Denver Westword

 

 


EDUCATION
Jefferson School of Social Science
Educational Alliance, New York, NY
Brooklyn Museum School of Art, Brooklyn, NY

TEACHING
Syracuse University, Special Education Department
Syracuse Art Workshop, sculpture instructor
Lumonics School of Light Art

EXHIBITIONS
Nov 8, 2021 – Jan 20, 2022,  Children’s Hospital Colorado, Aurora, CO, Luminaries 
Sept 17, 2020 – Jan 7, 2022, Meow Wolf Denver’s Convergence Street Galleri, Lumonics Art
Nov 27, 2020  – Jan 30, 2021,  Understudy Gallery, Denver, CO, Lumonics Mind Spa: Light Intersection
June 2, 2020  – Sept. 24, 2020,  Thornton Arts & Culture Center, Thornton, CO, Lumonics Mind Spa: Thornton
• Sept 14, 2019   – Feb 21, 2020,  7 Healing Stars, Black Hawk, CO
• Nov 8-Dec 31 The Storeroom, Denver, CO, From the Beginning: A Lumonics Light Art Installation
• June-August, 2019  Installation of light art in windows, Central City, CO 
Jan-July 2018  McNichols Civic Center Building, Denver, CO,
Lumonics Mind Spa:  Stretching the Body, Mind, and Spirit
• Jan-March 2017 Museum of Outdoor Arts, Englewood, CO,
Then and Now: A Retrospective of Light-Based Sculpture by Dorothy and Mel Tanner
• August, 2016-May 2017 The Scarlet,  Central City, CO,  The Lumonics Mind Spa
• Oct-Dec 2016  Museum of Outdoor Arts, Englewood, CO,  Reinventing the Image
• June, 2015 Lakewood Cultural Center, Lakewood, CO,  Creatures From Left Field
• Feb-May 2014 Art Gallery at Denver International AirportA Light Journey
• June 2011-Feb 2012 Museum of Outdoor Arts, Englewood, CO,  Light Supply
• Nov 2010-Jan 2011, Gallery 910, Denver, CO Best of Santa Fe Drive Show
• Oct-Nov, 2010: VERTIGO Art Space, Denver, CO, The Light Fantastic
• Nov 2009 Union Station Fund Raiser, Denver, CO
• August, 2009 18th Annual Loveland Sculpture Invitational, Loveland, CO
• Jan-March 2009 Union Gallery, Santa Fe Art District, Denver, CO
• 2007  ZONES Art Fair, Edge Zones Art Center, Miami FL
• 2005  Coral Springs Museum,  The Art of Lumonics
• 1987  Museum of New Arts, Fort Lauderdale
• 1985-86 Patricia Judith Gallery, Boca Raton, FL
• 1963  New York Univ., Loeb Center, New York, NY
• 1962  Key Gallery, East 57th Street, New York, NY

SPECIAL PROJECTS
Lumonics Light & Sound Gallery, Denver, CO
Lumonics Light and Sound Theatre, Ft. Lauderdale, FL
Lumonics Performing Art Gallery, Bangor, ME
• Environment, San Diego, CA
Lumonics Light and Sound Theatre, Miami, FL
• The Scarlet, Central City, CO

 ADDITIONAL PROJECTS
Zikr Dance Ensemble, “Lady of the Lake” 
WGBH-TV, Boston (sets for Frontline and Nova)
WBZ-TV, Boston (sets, including world map)

GRANTS
“Ecology through Art” video production, U.S. Govt. Grant
•  Museum of Outdoor Arts
• 
Meow Wolf 
Foundation for Contemporary Arts

MAYOR’S AWARD
•  2018 Denver Mayor’s Award for Excellence in Arts and Culture in the Innovation Category

COMMISSIONS AND INSTALLATIONS
Sheraton Hotel, LaGuardia Airport, New York
Hilton Hotels, Florida and Grand Bahamas
Fingers, Caracas, Venezuela (private club)
• The Library, Lexington, KY (nightclub)
Astro, Sarasota, FL (nightclub)
• Bemelman’s, Miami, FL (restaurant/discoteque)
House of Mo-Ko, Miami, FL (executive offices)
Hi-Fi Associates, Miami, FL (installation)
General Electric, New York, NY
Air Products & Chemicals, Allentown, PA
Raytheon Corporation, New York, NY
Desks, Inc., New York, NY