SUMMER WHEAT
Summer Wheat (b. 1977, Oklahoma City, OK) is known for her vibrant paintings, multifaceted sculptures, and
immersive installations that weave together the history of materiality, figuration, and abstraction in both fine art
and craft milieus. Each series engages individual and collective human experiences drawn from historical and
contemporary sources, mediated through a variety of references ranging from ancient art and medieval
tapestries, to etchings from the Renaissance, to modernist abstractions. Wheat’s work examines various
manifestations of labor, leisure, commerce, and class through the depiction of numerous figures and
archetypes such as farmers, hunters, beekeepers, gardeners, weavers, bankers, and movie stars. The artist’s
densely populated “scapes” envision worlds where time seems to have collapsed and every person,
regardless of social status, occupies a shared/equal space, in which both labor and leisure are paths to
healing humanity.
Wheat received a B.A. from the University of Central Oklahoma and an M.F.A. from Savannah College of Art
and Design. Solo exhibitions of her work have been organized at the Mint Museum, Charlotte, NC (2021);
Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO (2020); KMAC Museum, Louisville, KY (2019);
Shulamit Nazarian, Los Angeles, CA (2018); Smack Mellon, New York, NY (2018); Henry Art Gallery,
University of Washington, Seattle, WA (2017); and Oklahoma Contemporary, Oklahoma City, OK (2016).
Select group exhibitions featuring her work include,Yaro Pickers, Harper’s Books, New York, NY
(2020); Summer Wheat and Hirosuke Yabe, Wasserman Projects, Detroit, MI (2019); America Will Be!
Surveying the Contemporary Landscape, Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX (2019); The Magnetic Fields, Gio
Marconi, Milan, Italy (2019); SEED, Paul Kasmin Gallery, New York, NY (2018); More Material, Salon 94, New
York, NY (2014); Expanding the Field of Abstraction, Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA (2013-14); and
beyond the stretcher, deCordova Museum and Sculpture Park, Lincoln, MA. Wheat’s work is in numerous
public and private collections, including the Dallas Museum of Art, Dallas, TX; de Young Museum, San
Francisco, CA; Peréz Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL; The Henry Art Gallery at the University of Washington,
Seattle, WA; The Mint Museum, Charlotte, NC; and the Speed Art Museum in Louisville, KY. Wheat has
received several awards and prizes including, the Northern Trust Purchase Prize at EXPO Chicago (2019) and
the New York NADA Artadia Award (2016).
Featured above, from "Women Making History": Open Drain, 2021, Acrylic paint and gouache on aluminum mesh, framed
69 ½”H x 95 ½”W x 2”D