Years ago, the artist Harry Gould Harvey IV came across a fallen black walnut tree in a friend’s yard. He experienced a moment of revelation and felt a sudden urge to make a frame for his drawings from the dying tree.
“It defined my practice pretty starkly,” recalled Harvey, who is known for his gothic-inspired frames akin to polyptychs. After years of working as a professional photographer, Harvey, who is now represented by P·P·O·W, had turned to drawing as a more intimate form of expression. But he’d felt something was missing. In building frames from the world around him, he tapped into an atavistic connection to Fall River, Massachusetts, where he was born and raised.
“Working with found wood that has specific provenance to location and a certain history and carving it into frames became a way to contextualize the drawings with the value of place,” he said. Harvey is one of many contemporary artists who are choosing or creating borders for their works that push against the understated, unobtrusive frames that have dominated exhibition spaces for over a century. These artists are reclaiming the frame not only as a boundary, but as an extension of the artwork itself—a vessel for narrative, memory, and material resonance, drawing from the depths of art history in new ways.
Art advisor Emily Sussman pointed out this tendency recently in her Substack “Metier.” Sussman noted that artists are using frames as an extension of the work, writing that these are “a far cry from the ornate frames hanging around works in places like the Met, or the modernist and sleek frames found in contemporary stores (and chains like Framebridge) that certainly don’t distract nor detract from the art within.” She nodded to the work of artists Emma Kohlmann, Larissa Lockshin, Jenna Rothstein, and Stephanie Hemma Tier as emblematic of this trend. In Rothstein’s work, for instance, small-scale paintings on canvas are surrounded by frames of ceramic spiky teeth-like thorns or faux multi-color mosaics.
Meanwhile, a long-overlooked pioneer of contemporary framing recently received some overdue institutional accolades. Last fall, the New Museum Los Gatos, near San Jose, featured a solo exhibition of works by Holly Lane, a California artist who bucked the unwritten rule to keep frames minimalistic back in the 1980s. Lane instead milled elaborate wooden frames that harkened back to the Renaissance.
“At that time, if a painting had a frame at all, it was a thin line, serving as protection for the art, and as a conceptual dividing line,” Lane recalled. “A good frame was to be inconspicuous. If I made the frame itself art, that was conspicuous and relevant to the painting, then I could erode that sense of a border and posit that art has no borders, especially to our mind and soul.”
Frames are finally back in the spotlight—call it bordercore. A new wave of contemporary art is reconsidering the frame as a central character, one that is surreal, sculptural, and symbolic. Artists are using the border not just to contain, but to comment, disrupt, or extend the work beyond itself. This is driven by an embrace of more bespoke, historic artistic processes, but also, as a rebuttal to the superflat virtual age. More and more, paintings have been appearing at fairs and in exhibitions with statement frames, after a long era of often-frameless display. If for previous generations, the frame was a liability that could detract from the cerebral, intellectual, and aesthetic experience of the canvas, artists today are creating frames that attempt to pull us back into bodily reality, a haptic experience of art.
But First, a Brief Framing History
Before we dive into the current fascination with frames, what do we need to know about their history? Where did those ubiquitous little black—or white—frames come from, anyway?
Believe it or not, frames have been a hot-button topic for centuries. The concept of a frame as it is known today—a removable object around a work of art—has its roots in the 15th century, roughly coinciding with the rise of secular genres of European art (though framing devices date back to Greco-Roman times, too). But whether the frame was part of a work of art, an accent to it, or a potential distraction from creative genius, has been a tempestuous topic of debate among philosophers from Immanuel Kant to Jacques Derrida (Kant said frames were decidedly not art; Derrida didn’t exactly agree).
Surely enough, frames metamorphosed over the eras (art historian Lynn Roberts has independently recorded a history of frames on her website “The Frame Blog,” an invaluable resource on the myopically overlooked topic). The gilded ornamental frames, which are still so often seen in museums, had become popular in France by the 1700s. By the mid-to-late 1800s, with the dawn of industrialization, gilded frames that had previously been carved by hand gave way to lesser versions assembled from molds and paste. With this standardization, framemakers’ innovations and artistry waned, and frames became increasingly rote. At once, the Salon had codified gilded, rectangular frames for hanging—things were bleak.
By the 19th century, artists were rebelling, notably the Nazarenes in Germany and the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in England, who each innovated unique frames for their works.
The Impressionists built on this momentum and thrust frames into modernity with insouciant gusto. In 1877, Pissarro and Degas debuted works at the Salon in scandalizing simple white architrave frames. The decision was partially borne out of economy—these artists were poor. Still, it’s likely the artists were also inspired, in part, by the teachings of color theorist Eugene Chevreul, who believed that white lights heightened the effect of other hues.
Critics soon began to comment on the archetypal white frame as we know it today. Things were just kicking off, however, and as Modernism gained ascendancy in the 20th century, frames continued their streamlining. The canvas was a supreme and transcendent place of contemplation, and frames, in this view, best fade into the background and let artistry take the spotlight.
For a stretch, the measures to make frames invisible reached a near-comic peak. In the mid-century, “frameless” hanging techniques were popularized, encouraged by the debut of bildträger, or clip frames. For a generation of Modernists, these framing devices offered the quasi-philosophical fulfillment of art presented as boundless, seemingly floating in space. Still, there were moments of controversy: a 1949 exhibition of Giovanni Bellini’s work at the Palazzo Ducale, in Venice, displayed the Renaissance masterpieces in modernist contraptions under the direction of celebrated architect Carlo Scarpa, rather than replicas of historic frames, to the delight of some and dismay of others.
But even over these nadir decades, many artists embraced the frame. Wassily Kandinsky, Frida Kahlo, Georgia O’Keeffe, Florine Stettheimer, and many others, designed, purchased, built, and painted unique frames for their works.
Reframing History—And the Present
For some contemporary artists, the historical significance of the frame is front of mind. Among these is New York City artist Valerie Hegarty who creates multi-media sculptural works that look as though centuries-old paintings—and their frames—have endured the cataclysmic elements and the ruinous effects of time. She makes these works using a motley assortment of materials including wood, canvas, wire, air-dry clay, foil, tape, epoxy, acrylics, foam core, thread, paper, and more.
Hegarty’s works often reprise heroic landscape paintings à la the Hudson River School—but with a post-apocalyptic twist. A 2007 work, for instance, reimagines Albert Bierstadt’s 1869 painting Niagara Falls; in Hegarty’s work, the painting is torn, its frame, twisted, charred and all spilling downward from the wall toward the ground.
“I grew up in a house filled with Americana and early knockoffs of American landscape paintings. This idea of Manifest Destiny, virgin wilderness, and American identity, is so tied to landscape painting,” Hegarty explained in conversation. “To me, in a museum, a frame meant the narrative was set. That this was truth. Breaking the frame is questioning the narrative, exploding the narrative, or suggesting that there is something wrong with it.”
By disrupting the frame, she attempts to pull viewers into conversation and into the timeline of history itself. Her work Fallen Bierstadt in the collection of the Brooklyn Museum has often stopped visitors in their tracks to ask what has happened to the work.
“There’s this idea that the paintings are timeless when they’re framed. The bigger the frame, the more important the narrative. When you are making the painting decay, it’s questioning that idea of timelessness or the truth of the narrative, but also referencing the materials and maintenance that goes into keeping these paintings in pristine shape,” she added.
Kang Seung Lee, who is represented by Alexander Gray Associates, designs frames made from a variety of wood burls that also engage with history. At times, these frames are positioned horizontally, on the ground, as with his installation Untitled (Constellation), which was on view at the 60th Venice Biennale last year, and which shifts perception, physically. “In some ways, the work resembles mood or vision boards meditating the juxtaposition of information and context,” he explained. “To me, it was like creating a fertile ground.” This installation, like many of Lee’s works, examines queer histories across many geographical locations, countries, and continents, offering a diffuse rather than didactic approach to history and welcoming into the fold stories that have long been kept on history’s margins.
The Sacred and the Surreal
What can the medieval marginalia of illuminated manuscripts—books with painted decoration that includes precious metals such as gold or silver—tell us about our current moment of inspired and even outlandish framing? It’s an unexpected question, but a fruitful one. For artist Holly Lane, the bawdy and beatific doodles in medieval manuscripts sparked her frame-building journey. As a student at San Jose State University in the mid-1980s, she came across illuminated manuscripts in the library and was mesmerized by the way the scrolling borders visually commented on the text.
“Sometimes the borders had naughty creatures spoofing the text, even mooning the text—that was my moment of epiphany,” Lane said. “I realized that a frame could be many things; it could be a commentary, an informing context, it could extend movement, it could be a conceptual or formal elaboration, it could embody ancillary ideas, it could be a shelter, it could be an environment, it could be like a body that houses and expresses the mind, and many other rich permutations.”
She began to build frames that fused frame and painting, at times even including doors that opened and closed over her paintings—often German Romantic-inspired landscapes. “I envision the frames not as a border, but as a conceptual and formal elaboration, embodying ancillary ideas, setting up pattern rhythms, extending movement, shape rhyming, enshrining,” said Lane.
Frames and paintings form a similarly symbiotic, elaborative relationship in the work of Brooklyn-based ceramicist Stephanie Temma Hier. Her delightfully decadent works marry surrealistic, sculptural ceramic frames—a toothy mouth, mollusks, bunches of carrots—with startlingly juxtaposed oil paintings—men wrestling, en pointe ballet slippers, and bountiful heaps of food. Not unlike manuscript marginalia, her ceramic frames from associative games with the paintings inside them.
Meanwhile, the London- and New York-based multimedia artist CARO has also reinterpreted illuminated manuscripts. Several years ago, the artist, who is trained in jewelry production, was mulling over the boundaries between art and craft and experimenting with merging embroidery and metalwork.
“I felt like what was keeping embroidery back from acceptance in the art world was the hoop, the circular frame. I thought if I can make a rectangle, I can show my work as though it is a painting,” she explained. “In making these works, I was inspired by illuminated manuscripts.”
With a touch of humor, the New York artist Almendra Bertoni combines aspects of the sacred and the surreal winkingly in her colorful works. Despite the hyper-modern sleekness of Bertoni’s aesthetics, she works with wood panels for her compositions and frames—a material often associated with religious icons of centuries past. Grappling with themes of femininity, rage, and sexual and religious taboos; her frames, which she cuts and paints herself, have taken the forms of oversized ribbons or balloon-like flowers.
More recently, however, she’s embraced quasi-Catholic imagery, her frames echoing the shapes of praying hands, doves, and serpents. The artist, who was born in Buenos Aires, and raised in Miami, acknowledges the influence of both Renaissance art and contemporary churches.
“In my work, these religious themes are a way of challenging doctrine but also thinking about devotion in a respectful way,” said Bertoni. But her works, with their trompe l’oeil frames, also nod to Surrealism, and artists such as Salvador Dali, Frida Kahlo, and Leonor Fini. Bold, bright frames can, Bertoni added “serve as a way of reaching the otherworldly, of breaking the bounds of that square canvas.”
Bold Frames in a Flattened Age
If the myriad contemporary artists innovating frames had a rallying cry it might be: Joy in materiality!
For some, the material makeup of their frames holds potent significance. Harvey, the artist who made a frame with a fallen black walnut tree, describes his frames as a “provenance, almost a ready-made setting.” For a recent project at Shanghai’s Rockbund Art Museum, he made frames from wood cut down on the land of the Delano family in Massachusetts, who he said were among the most successful opium smugglers, and the grandparents to Franklin Delano Roosevelt. “Showing frames carved with this wood is a direct, economic, cultural, and linguistic invocation, and allowed me to bridge that history to now,” said Harvey.
Kang Seung Lee’s frames hold similar material resonance. In a recent series called “In Skin,” Lee looked to aging queer bodies as both living personal and political archives and source wood for his frames that would reflect a dendrochronology, using maple, olive tree, redwood, and walnut sourced mostly from naturally fallen trees on the West Coast.
For other artists, such as Alicia Adamerovich of Timothy Taylor gallery, who has made unique wooden frames for her biomorphic drawings, creating frames was a chance to make frames as sincerely curious as the drawings themselves. “The hectic nature of everything we consume on a daily basis pushes some artists to drift towards making repetitive, super cohesive, and almost branded work,” she said, “For me, it caused a desire to make things that jump around in some way, either aesthetically or conceptually.”
Brooklyn ceramicist Stephanie Temma Hier believes that the physicality of her frames resists the permeating, flattening aesthetic afoot in today’s culture. She no longer sees her frames and paintings as being distinct from each other. Instead, through their unexpected union, these hybrid artworks jolt viewers back into the material world.
“Paintings are not just images, they are made from pigments, fabrics, wood, and metal,” she explained. “Even the Modernists were obsessed with the thickness of the paint and how that contributed to the feeling of the image. Now paintings are so often flattened by the photographs that represent them, that we can forget that the objects possess a real presence. Yet somehow when a painting is framed by a sculptural, non-rectangular frame it can reanimate its presence on the wall.”
Bertoni, meanwhile, put it succinctly: “I think about algorithms and how our attention spans are just so shortened now that you want to experiment in ways to get people to stop scrolling.”
But, for these artists, not just the art lovers need to take a moment—the artists do too. CARO, who is studying jewelry techniques known by a dwindling handful of aging artisans, sees her labor-intensive works as a visual speed bump.
“The belief is forward is always better,” she said “’I’m a bit of a contrarian, but there’s so much to be said for slowness. We can learn a lot by studying history. Progress isn’t always linear. I’m always trying to valorize methods of working that are aligned with a slower pace, circadian at the pace of the body and the natural world.”
An early adopter of intricate frames Holly Lane aims to engage both the mental and visual experiences of art. “I see pictorial space as mind space as we must project our minds into the painting,” she said, “While the spatial qualities of [a sculptural frame] exists in our own physical space; we walk around it, proportion our bodies to it—so in part, [it] is apprehended or “seen” by the body.” In this way, bold frames try, however fleetingly, to pull our minds back into the experience of our bodies.