Joann Gedney was an American Abstract Expressionist painter and sculptor whose career was deeply rooted in the downtown New York art scene. Born in East Orange, New Jersey, she moved to Manhattan in 1947, taking a loft on East 8th Street and immersing herself in the emerging Abstract Expressionist community. Determined to forge an independent artistic path, she articulated her commitment to creative autonomy in her journals, emphasizing a deeply personal and self-directed approach to artmaking.
Gedney studied at the Art Students League under Nahum Tschacbasov, whose influence shaped her understanding of painting as an intuitive, artist-to-artist exchange. By 1950, she had moved to East 10th Street, at the heart of the New York School. There, she became an active participant in the social and intellectual life of the avant-garde, frequenting the Cedar Tavern and engaging with artists connected to “the Club,” including figures such as Franz Kline.
In 1957, Gedney co-founded the March Gallery, one of the cooperative spaces that defined the Tenth Street Galleries, helping to create alternative exhibition opportunities outside the commercial gallery system. Although often overlooked in male-dominated narratives of Abstract Expressionism, she was an integral presence within this community, contributing to its collaborative and experimental spirit.
Gedney’s paintings are characterized by gestural brushwork, bold linear structures, and dynamic fields of color. While fundamentally abstract, her compositions frequently allude to the human figure and landscape, reflecting her ongoing interest in the expressive potential of the body and face. Over a career spanning more than six decades, she remained a constant presence in New York’s East Village, continuing to live and work there until her death in 2013.

