Jacksonville, Florida — A selection of contemporary painters from across the country—Haley Hasler, Jason John, Andrea Kowch, Bryan LeBoeuf, Jenny Morgan, Kevin Muente, Frank Oriti and Kevin Peterson—provides a snapshot of the current landscape of realist painting in the United States. The heavily figurative focus of “Get Real: New American Paiting” explores themes that have persisted throughout the recent history of American realist painting such as narrative portraiture and social, psychological and magical realism.
A preview reception is 6-7pm Sept. 12, 2014, for patrons, and 7-9pm for members. Sip specialty cocktails, taste real American cuisine, and visit with several exhibition artists in the galleries. The exhibition opens to the general public Sept. 13 and continues through Jan. 4, 2015.
The eight artists present a multifaceted view of the American experience, contrasting the historic and the contemporary, pastoral and urban landscapes, the personal and the universal, the immanent and the transcendent. Through the eyes of these artists, the viewer may travel between the magical depictions of a distant American heartland in work of Kowch or Muente to the hardscrabble, urban worlds of Oriti or Peterson. Whether their inspiration is drawn from memory or reality, the artists strike a balance between the everyday and the epic as seen in LeBoeuf’s tightly controlled theatrical compositions or John’s surreal scenes that seem to be in a state of perpetual motion. Aspects of identity and relationships, as well as issues of sexuality and femininity, are best explored through the in the works of Hasler and Morgan.
The products of diverse educational and geographic roots, these young painters, mostly under the age of 40, are charting a path for contemporary American realist painting. Although rooted in a strong tradition of realist painting, they are also very much products of the modern world and the global information age.
Hasler uses the self-portrait—a practical and economic solution to the need for a model—as a way to access the personal within the archetypal heroine. Through these iconic forms, she investigates artifice versus reality, interior versus exterior, and creator versus creation. The faces of her portraits convey the bewilderment and fatigue of young motherhood in turbulent surroundings elaborately and fastidiously executed.
“The self-portrait as a character introduces a further element,” Hasler wrote in her artist statement. “While the self-portrait implies that the artist is showing us the truth, a representation of the exterior in disguise conveys the impossibility and doubleness of this endeavor.”
John’s paintings contain bizarre and beguiling landscapes that could be real—or projected from the minds of his figures. In these mystical, surrealist scenes, floating fruit and flowers or abstract shapes might only exist in the subjects’ subconscious. Many figures wear masks or headpieces constructed of cardboard packaging or craft paper.
“As a painter, I represent figures trapped in an environment of uneasiness and flux,” John said in his artist statement. “Partially concealing the identity of an individual removes the personal relationship viewers would expect to feel for those represented. Each character in my paintings has become one with their environment and can evolve toward empowerment or devolve into personal displacement and loss of identity.”
Kowch’s paintings feature three friends who model for her allegorial scenes using the palette and metaphors of autumn. The women’s inscrutable expressions hide their true emotions, while their windswept hair hints at feelings that might be surging underneath the controlled exterior. The desolate American landscape surrounding the paintings’ subjects explores nature as a reflection of the human soul—powerful, fragile, and eternal. The haunting, dreamlike scenarios evoke both melancholy and nostalgia, giving the work an ambiguous and suspenseful edge.
“What some may see in my work as ‘intense’ or ‘disturbing,’ others may see as beautiful and liberating,” Kowch told Deanna Elaine Piowaty in an interview for Combustus.
Informed by European masters, his careful compositions incorporate beautifully painted surfaces and almost baroque lighting effects. His tightly controlled technique, representational subject matter, and subtly manipulated compositions are meant to create a through-the-looking-glass illusion, removing barriers between viewers and the images. Through his cropping, positioning, and modeling of figures, LeBoeuf creates the impression of unseen space, asking viewers to imagine the focus of the attention of a figure who gazes into space, beyond the confines of the canvas.
“If all we had to do was manage craft! Look at the French Academy. My God! Every student in an atelier—they’re all extraordinary!” LeBoeuf told Morris Museum of Art Curator Jay Williams in an interview. “But their technique is like a camera could do it … Technique in picture-making won’t save the work; but without it, it will probably die.”
Technically intricate with a haunting quality, Morgan’s paintings experiment with psychological visual realism, obscuring the physical to expose the spiritual. She obfuscates the portraits’ meticulous details by annihilating their identities, sanding and stripping away layers like physical and spiritual wounds while retaining a striking intimacy. Morgan depicts people she knows well, creating renderings that are sensitive and compassionate, and sometimes brutally perceptive.
“I feel like I am still searching for the spirit within all my subjects,” Morgan told Whitewall magazine. “The work is all about finding and bringing to life that invisible force in people.”
His paintings explore the human experience through the metaphor of landscape by featuring archetypal figures within idealized rural surroundings. The emotions portrayed in these small moments of human action tap into universal themes.
“On reflection, I realize that these cinematic paintings depict people facing the most elemental conflict in nature—life and death—and they ask more questions than they answer,” Muente wrote in his artist statement.
Oriti’s detailed portraits depict the people he’s known since childhood as blue-collar protagonists, gazing stoically or perhaps with a hint of aggression. Suburban houses appear faintly in the background—often the subjects’ childhood homes—a visualization of the attempt to “whiteout” their longing to achieve the American Dream after failing to escape their hometown.
“It’s hard being in the world and going back to a place with so many childhood memories, when as a person you’ve matured,” Oriti told The New York Times. “You get this effect of this fading memory of a place they once knew.”
While working as a probation officer in Austin, difficulties with drugs and alcohol led to an arrest and the loss of his job. During treatment, he rediscovered his passion for creating art. Peterson has been sober since July 30, 2005, and has pursued an art career ever since.
His paintings depict the strength required to survive and thrive in a world of trauma, fear and loneliness. His recent work portrays issues of race and the division of wealth. His hyper-realistic style contrasts the young and innocent against gritty, urban backgrounds, yet evidence of the painter’s brush adds warmth and hope.
“My work is about the varied journeys we take through life,” Peterson wrote in his artist statement. “It’s about growing up and living in a world that is broken.”
Women Painting Women, Thursday, October 23 @ 7pm: A discussion with “Get Real” featured artists Haley Hasler, Andrea Kowch, and Jenny Morgan about their roles in the art world, the women in their artwork, and why they paint them. A members’ reception will be held at 6pm. A three-course prix fixe dinner for Avant Garde and Collectors’ Circle members will take place at 8:30pm in Café Nola ($49 per person, includes tax and tip; wine pairings and full bar available for additional charge, payable the night of the dinner; reservations required).
DISCUSSION FREE AND OPEN TO THE PUBLIC