June Harwood:
Edging Into View
August 24 - December 14, 2024
June Harwood refined a style of abstraction and compositional rigor that she had started
developing around 1960. This style eventually became known as “Hard-Edge,” a term
coined in 1959 by critic and curator Jules Langsner (whom Harwood married in 1964).
Langsner also described the style as Abstract Classicism, in contrast to New York
City’s Abstract Expressionist movement. Hard-Edge painting was characterized by flat
planes of color defined by sharp borders, uniform paint application, bold colors,
and pure abstraction.
Harwood was born in Middleton, New York, in 1933 and received a BFA from Syracuse
University in 1953. She moved to California, earning an MA from California State University,
Los Angeles, in 1957. While working as a teacher at Hollywood High School and then
a professor at Los Angeles Valley College,
June Harwood: Edging Into View is a survey of Harwood’s work, with an emphasis on her better-known Hard-Edge work
of the 1960s and 1970s. The exhibition will include several recent donations to the
Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art collection by the June Harwood Charitable Trust.
In addition, a smaller exhibition of works by Harwood’s peers in the NEHMA collection,
most notably, Frederick Hammersley, Lorser Feitelson, Helen Lundeberg and John McLaughlin,
will also be on view.
A catalogue accompanying the exhibition will include essays by curator and art historian
Daniel Cornell, writer and critic Christopher Knight, curator Rebecca McGrew, and
curator and June Harwood Charitable Trust Trustee Dennis Reed.

June Harwood
Untitled (Sliver Series), 1964
Oil on canvas
32 x 58.75 inches
© June Harwood Charitable Trust

June Harwood in her studio, late 1960s, photo by Gerry Kim
© June Harwood Charitable Trust.