Herman Cherry
Herman Cherry (b. 1909 – d. 1992) occupied a distinctive place in 20th-century American art. Unlike many of his contemporaries who pursued the commercial success of Abstract Expressionism, Cherry charted a quieter, more introspective path rooted in artistic integrity and modernist inquiry. His work reflected a lyrical and intellectual engagement with abstraction, drawing on the structural and spiritual sensibilities of Matisse, Klee, and Kandinsky rather than the gestural bravado of Pollock or de Kooning. Cherry approached painting as a continuous evolution of form, color, and rhythm—balancing spontaneity with order in a manner both painterly and deliberate. An artist’s artist, he stood slightly apart from the art market, earning deep respect among peers for his rigor, humility, and dedication to the principles of modernism.
Herman Cherry exhibited widely throughout his career, beginning with early shows at the Stanley Rose Gallery in Los Angeles in the 1940s and later at Weyhe Gallery and the Stable Gallery in New York, where he participated in all five of the landmark Stable Annuals between 1953 and 1957. He presented important solo museum exhibitions at the Pasadena Museum of Art and the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, alongside retrospectives at Baruch College, Luise Ross Gallery, and the State University of Stony Brook. Cherry’s work was also included in major group exhibitions at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, The Phillips Collection, and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. His paintings are held in prominent public collections including the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, the Brooklyn Museum, the Walker Art Center, the Parrish Art Museum, and the British Museum, among others.
