Where:
LaiSun Keane
460C Harrison Ave 8A
Boston, Ma 02118
Admission:
FREE
Categories:
Art
Event website:
https://www.laisunkeane.com/disparate
Eva Lewis
Disparate
April 1 - May 1, 2022
ARTIST TALK
Artist Eva Lewis x special guest Lucy Kim, Associate Professor of Art, Boston University.
Saturday April 2, 2022, 1:00-2:00 pm
Come and join us!
Please RSVP at [email protected]
I create paintings which use figure, color, light and composition to explore stories of feminine identifying people. With invented, chromatic worlds, I am referencing stories of mythological goddesses and playful experiences with my friends. I often use beautiful, bright colors I identify as feminine, such as hot pinks, teals, and yellows, that unapologetically asks for the viewer's attention through saturation. I am also interested in the way light can play a character with the forms by bringing nuanced shadows and illuminating the atmosphere. Using high-key pigment or pointed light I create surreal worlds that are made recognizable with representational colors and nameable objects. The compositions I use to hold these ideas are derived from my Midwest upbringing and often reference places of home for me. The figures are found dawdling in fields or dreaming by water. Sometimes they are found in houses, lounging inside the womb of a structure. Historically, both settings have been spoken of as feminine representations. In society the interior is seen as a domestic space, typically set aside for women to care for. Throughout art historical narratives, specifically in the Renaissance and Baroque era, the conquering of land was symbolically seen through illustration of the capture or rape of the female nude. Showcasing disrobed porcelain bodies being swept away within a dreamy landscape of blues skies and atmospheric mountains. I find myself simultaneously inspired by the ethereal worlds these artists have created and driven to protest their use of the female figures as an object to please the male gaze. My work utilizes the circular composition, commonly used in renaissance painting, ensuring the audiences engagement with the surface. The circle functions as a structure in painting as well as a representation of the menstrual cycle. My paintings resist the way the circle allows the viewer to examine a nude body for personal pleasure and instead is inviting the eye to move through stories of women who hold their own autonomy.
-Eva Lewis
For more details and the exhibition checklist, email [email protected]
Tuesday, Dec 31, 2024 9:00p
Sam Adams Taproom Downtown Boston