Excerpted from Reminiscences,
              by Frances Stillman, 1988 
              "...It was in the fall of 1947 or perhaps the 
                spring of 1948 that Bertha Schaefer opened her gallery on 57th 
                Street. She had been widely known for years as an interior decorator, 
                but for some time she had been eager to widen the scope of her 
                work and to gather around her a group of representative painters. 
                She wanted to advance the idea that one shouldn't choose a painting 
                to fit in with the decor of a room, that one should choose a painting 
                or paintings he or she would want to live with, and then build 
                the tone of the room around the painting or paintings. She talked 
                with Ary about this a number of times  they had been friends 
                for years  and when she was prepared to exhibit her first 
                group show she asked Ary to send in a painting. Milton Avery was 
                in that show I recall, and Will Barnet, Ben Zion, Sue Fuller, 
                Ary and others I can't remember. From this came a continued association 
                for Ary with Bertha's gallery  many group shows, and a series 
                of five one-man shows, beginning in February 1949 through 1954, 
                until we left New York for Paris..."
              
               
                January 15 - February 3, 1951
                Press Clippings
               "Order and organization predominate in Ary 
                Stillmans paintings of abstract form at the Bertha Schaefer 
                Gallery, where he continues to consolidate in oil, gouache, drawing 
                and pastels the direction his art began to take in the recent 
                past. Emotional values are introduced chiefly in respect to color 
                and in the rippling cadences with which he defines amass of form 
                eliciting a sensation of movement. Much concerned with this idea, 
                his work relates to the dance, to arabesquerie and geometry of 
                form, as in Facets I, a decidedly sensitive re-employment of the 
                cubist convention in subdued colors. It is a largely cerebral 
                art but a sensitive one that the artist carries through its various 
                developments, with just enough feeling to give it poetic implication."
              by Carlyle Burrows
                The New York Herald Tribune
              Sunday, January 21, 1951
               "Ary Stillman, in his oils, drawings and gouaches 
                at the Bertha Schaefer Gallery, manages many different kinds of 
                abstract design. The shapes  now tall and flame-like, and 
                again sinuous and interweaving  do not lead separate lives 
                but contribute to thoughtfully planned overall formal schemes. 
                Color has a subdued and refined quality
"
              The New York Times
                January 19, 1951
              "Ary Stillman, in his current showing of his 
                past years work at the Bertha Schaefer Gallery, is still 
                concerned with richly orchestrated abstractions in which there 
                is almost a classical feeling of balance in the space and form 
                relationships, in the counterpoint of color values and textural 
                qualities, and in the overtones of mood and atmosphere. This all 
                adds up to emotional rewards and stimulation so often absent in 
                abstract work. 1950 was also a year of new experimentation for 
                Stillman; the latest paintings in the exhibition are based on 
                rhythmic arabesques suggested by human forms in movement. This 
                is also discernible in the gouaches with their linear movements 
                in fluent white outlines played against pearly-toned backgrounds. 
                Abstract drawings in charcoal, beautifully transparent and glowing, 
                round out the exhibition."
              by Charles Z. Offin
                Pictures on Exhibit
              January 1951
              
                 
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                                    Facets 1 
                    1950 
                    charcoal and pastel on paper 
15 1/4 x 12 1/4  
Albright-Knox Art Gallery, NY  | 
                                      Fire Dance 
                    1950 
                    oil on canvas 
                    28 1/4 x 24 3/8 
                    Private Collection, TX  | 
                
              
              "Ary Stillman paints quiet but satisfying gouaches
                and oils. Using soft browns, grays and blues into which linear
                black and white rhythmic variations are introduced, he avoids
                close contact with objects. A gouache called 'Space Rhythms'
                contains the most successfully controlled spaces. Of the oils,
                'Rhythms in Gray' moves the eye pleasantly through a curving
                labyrinth and is more intense than the large Metamorphosis where
                some areas are hazy but where less dependence on line gives greater
                ease to its visual qualities."
              by R.G.
                Art News
                January 1951
              
                
                   
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                  Rhythms in Gray 
1951 
oil on canvas 
44 x 36 
Foundation Collection, TX  | 
                  Ritual 
                    1962 
                    gouache on paper  
26 x 20 
The Montclair Art Museum, NJ  |