Discipline: Visual Art – painting

Mary Buckley

Discipline: Visual Art – painting
MacDowell Fellowships: 1958
Mary Buckley has been recognized in solo shows at the Prince Street Gallery, New York City; Hutchins Gallery, C. W. Post College, Brookville, NY; the President's Gallery, Pratt Institute, Brooklyn, NY; and the Smithy-Pioneer Gallery in Cooperstown, NY. At the Cathedral of St. John the Divine, she exhibited in the cathedral art gallery and completed a permanent installation of 62 paintings entitled “Celebrating the Life of St. Columba” in the St. Columba Chapel. The St. Columba project took months of research and was four years in the making. In the year 2000, her work was exhibited at the Coffey Gallery in Kingston, NY and a retrospective was held at the Cooperstown Art Association in 2001. The Yager Museum at Hartwick College in Oneonta, NY organized a major exhibit of her paintings in 2004. Her paintings and sculptures are included in the collections of Yale University Art Gallery, The Heckscher Museum, Pratt Institute, The Albany Art Institute, The New York State Historical Association, the New Britain Museum of Art, and the New York state Legislature Building, as well as numerous private collections. Beyond the canvas, Mary Buckley applied her design and color acumen to large-scale public sculptures and commissions. People II, a permanent outdoor sculpture for the grounds of the New York State capital, and the New York State standards, were both commissioned by the New York State Legislature in 1971. This project followed People I, created for the Paragon Corporation in Melville, NY and Tennis Players for Deer Park High School in Deer Park, NY. She served as color consultant in the late 50's and early 60's to architect Philip Johnson, and in the 80's to the furniture manufacturer, Herman Miller, Inc. She co-founded and directed the Margaret Gate Institute, a non-profit organization active from 1973 through the mid 1980's, which involved Pratt students in designing environments of color, light, and visual warmth for patients in psychiatric centers and hospitals. In her 37 years as a professor of art and design at Pratt Institute, Mary Buckley served for many years as a coordinator of the Foundation Art program, developing the basic course in Light, Color and Design for freshmen in 1960, followed by color concepts courses for upperclassmen, a color course for the graduate industrial design program, and an experimental color course in the School of Architecture. She was honored as a Distinguished Professor at Pratt Institute in 1992. In 1975, she authored Color Theory, published by Gale Research Company. Her articles on color have appeared in Time and Life magazines, and she was a contributing editor on color to the Dictionary of Art Terms and Techniques. Among her many awards and honors, Mary Buckley was a fellow of MacDowell and the Royal Society of Art (U. K.). She was the recipient of an American Psychiatric Association Citation for her work with the Margaret Gate Institute and the American Society of Interior Designers Gold Medal Award for her Textile Designs for the office furniture manufacturer, Herman Miller.