Glick’s paintings are notable for their improvisational yet rhythmic formal play. In each of her works, she
juxtaposes a scrim of geometric patterns with cascades of looping gestural swirls. Reinforcing the square
format of the canvas, she suspends an architecture of interconnected vertical and horizontal segments
punctuated by arcs, zigs, zips and diagonals. Underlying this scaffolding are broad, free-wheeling swathes of
colour interrupted by explosive splatters of pigment. Glick’s paintings, created as distinct series, walk a
tightrope between movement and containment, expressiveness and restraint. They can be understood as
psychological mappings of nature or depictions of heightened emotional states. Never static, they mark the
passage of time, and capture the cyclical rhythms of life.
Born in Albany, Georgia in 1956, Glick studied Painting at the Rhode Island School of Design in 1980, where
she was a recipient of the Florence Leif Award. She received her MFA from the University of Buffalo in 2019.
Glick’s paintings were widely exhibited during the 1980s and 1990s, most notably with solo shows at White
Columns (Josh Baer, Director), Wolff Gallery and Hirschl and Adler in New York and Michael Kohn Gallery in
Los Angeles. She was also included in group exhibitions at Pat Hearn Gallery and the Drawing Center in New
York. In 1981 Glick was included in the ‘Western New York’ exhibition at Buffalo AKG Art Museum (formerly
Albright-Knox Art Gallery). More recently, Glick had a second solo exhibition at White Columns, New York in
2016 and at The Journal Gallery, New York in 2021.
In 1995, Glick moved to Vermont to focus on her young family. During this time, her practice predominately
centred around collage and works on paper. In 2019 Glick was awarded an artist residency at BuBu, Budapest,
Hungary, culminating in an exhibition at Budapest Art Factory. Glick’s work is included in several collections
including Buffalo AKG Art Museum, New York; The Broad, Los Angeles, California; Burchfield Penney Art
Center, Buffalo, New York; The Eli & Edythe Broad Foundation, Los Angeles, California; Deutsche Bank, New
York and Citi Bank, New York.