Description:

Ida Rittenberg Kohlmeyer
American/Louisiana, 1912-1997
"Kakatoe"
enamel and epoxy on aluminum
1992, unsigned.

Provenance: Acquired directly from the artist by Imago Galleries, Palm Desert, CA and exhibited in "Ida Kohlmeyer Recent Works", 1994; Collection of Madeline and Edward Redstone, Rancho Mirage, CA.

Note: A native of New Orleans, Ida Kohlmeyer achieved international acclaim as an artist and developed her own unique perspective on abstract art. She is widely considered one of the most influential artists from Louisiana and the South, although her art career did not begin until later in life. Following graduation from Sophie Newcomb Memorial College at Tulane University in 1933, Kohlmeyer married and raised a family. Dissatisfied with what she called a "vapid, dilettante life," she first joined the John McCrady Art School in 1947, and then began classes at Newcomb College under the tutelage of Pat Trivigno in 1950. She eventually pursued a master's degree in fine arts, producing primarily figurative studies and representational work for her thesis. Following the completion of her degree in 1956, Kohlmeyer spent a formative summer at the art colony in Provincetown, Massachusetts studying under Hans Hofmann. Abstraction appealed to the Kohlmeyer, and she likened her sudden shift from representation to being freed from prison. The following year, Mark Rothko came to New Orleans in a visiting artist position at Tulane and moved his family into the Metairie home of Ida Kohlmeyer's late mother. The resulting friendship between Kohlmeyer and Rothko would have a profound influence on the trajectory of her work.

By the 1970s, Kohlmeyer had transcended the influences of Hofmann and Rothko and moved entirely to non-objective subject matter. She developed her own code of schematic symbols, which she often arranged in a grid pattern on her canvases or rearranged into sculptural totems. These works are abstract, yet linguistic, and hint at the deep personal emotion behind them. While the symbols present a pictographic code, their meaning remains elusive. Beginning in the late 1960s, Kohlmeyer explored the extension of her pictorial compositions into three dimensions. Taking several approaches in both small and large scale, the initial sculptures played with form and texture, almost always reflecting her contemporaneous paintings. By the mid-1980s, Kohlmeyer was extracting shapes from her grid paintings and reassembling them into totemic forms that served as anthropomorphic representations within her complex visual language. As the sculptures developed, the scale increased and the works, created in fabricated steel or aluminum and then painted, became more elaborately volumetric, as seen in the monumental "Kakatoe" of 1992 offered here.

Throughout her active career, Kohlmeyer successfully exhibited her work in prestigious galleries and museums nationwide, with over one hundred solo exhibitions. She received the National Women's Caucus for Art's outstanding achievement award in 1980 and was the subject of her first major retrospective exhibition at the Mint Museum in Charlotte, North Carolina in 1983. Kohlmeyer can be considered a matriarch among American artists, as she broke the mold for southern artists and women artists alike during her lifetime. Her legacy is one of joyful, colorful artworks and a generation of female creators who follow in her footsteps.

Ref.: Plante, Michael. Ida Kohlmeyer: Systems of Color. New York: Hudson Hills Press, 2004; Kessler, Jane. Ida Kohlmeyer: Thirty Years. Charlotte, NC: The Mint Museum, 1983.

  • Dimensions: 91 x 62 x 23 in. (231.1 x 157.5 x 58.4 cm.)
  • Medium: enamel and epoxy on aluminum
  • Condition: Overall pristine condition; key-slotted under base for ease in mounting if desired, not required.

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November 21, 2025 11:00 AM CST
New Orleans, LA, US

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