STACY LEIGH – NERVES

Posted on 2017-05-01

Each of the recent portraits on view conjure women who appear to float in the middle distance, ungrounded. Leigh’s solitary figures – painted with acrylic on canvas – are imperious and aloof; they present themselves at a studied remove from the viewer.

The palette of these works likewise contributes to their energy. Leigh uses background colors to create undulating waves of tones. Their values gradiate as they pulse farther from the subject, recalling aura photographs. Jewel-like blues and deep maroons create a ghostly and mysterious tenor, and help to create an atmosphere of nowhere.

Leigh builds up the paintings over time, delicately rendering their slightest details with tenderness. Networked veins run below the translucent skin on Carolyn’s arm; the imprint of a bikini tan line suggests a sunburn on Amara’s voluptuous, otherwise pale thighs; a constellation of freckles cover the majority of Sadie’s body as her head tilts to the side, pubic hair slightly visible from her translucent underwear. Each painting suggests a story with no certainty, offering only clues and narrative speculation. Are these figures sexual avatars, or tense young women? Does the “nerves” of the title refer to a mental state of anxiety, or the literal muscle fibers within our bodies? These works sit in the uncanny valley of representation, eliciting, at once, empathy and mystery, desirability and emptiness.

Opposite – Madolyn

Exhibition runs through to June 11th, 2017

Fortnight Institute
60 E 4th St
New York
NY 10003

fortnight.institute

  

VANESSA PRAGER – ULTRAVIOLET

Posted on 2017-05-01

Prager’s work has garnered critical acclaim for its rich impasto, which bends and refracts light across deeply layered three-dimensional surfaces, offering the viewer a variation of perspectives. Up close see the varying rhythms and nuances in the artist’s brush strokes and stratified layers of paint. There is a physicality that needs to be explored face to face in a personal way. However, pull back from the work and the light again shifts, revealing a face or a figure slyly staring back at you, as if to say “what took you so long?”

The December 2016 issue of Cultured magazine, said that Prager’s work “both conceals and reflects” and that it “dissects people intensely.” Her paintings were described as “tortured souls rendered with thousands of thick richly colored marks, a nearly 3D, ultra-impasto style that places her in a historical lineage after Frank Auerbach or Willem de Kooning.”

Ultraviolet marks an important evolution for Prager as she turns the brush on herself, revealing who she is, or possibly who she wants to be. Full figures are also beginning to emerge, but overall she moves toward the inclusion of colorful, luscious, painterly abstraction. Another impressive achievement is Prager’s ramping up of her scale: one of the new paintings measures 8 x 12 feet, inviting the viewer to more completely enter her assumed world; they become experiential.

Opposite – Blue Velvet, 2017

Exhibition runs from May 13th through to June 17th, 2017

Richard Heller Gallery
2525 Michigan Ave. #B-5A
Santa Monica
CA 90404

www.richardhellergallery.com

  

ROLLING DEATH MAUI – TITTY-SHAKA FIGURE

Posted on 2017-05-01

Introducing the Resin Titty-Shaka figure, an iconic design from the Hawaii brand Rolling Death Maui, which spawned from Nate Robertson’s sketching of a pair of boobs on a shaka sketch on a light table at a tattoo shop. The rest was history. They’ve created pins, stickers, patches, you name it. Now the time has finally come from a 3D edition. This piece was produced by Silent Stage Gallery and ‘Umi Toys Hawai’I’ and stands roughly 6” tall and limited to 100 pieces.

rollingdeathmaui.com