Cecily Brown

Exhibition

Painting

Cecily Brown

Past: October 19 → December 20, 2014

”Something that’s just glimpsed seems more real than something that’s fully described.”

Cecily Brown

In recent times, Brown, a highly expressive contemporary painter in active dialogue with the history of painting, has been contending with the genres of figurative study and the nude ensemble. In her visible grapple with formal concerns, she conceives each canvas as a compositional flux, compressing subject and background, and incorporating a palette of bright contrasting hues. Stylistically diverse nudes — some loosely suggested, others clearly identifiable — make explicit her aim of conveying images in a barely elusive shorthand. This approach results in encounters with figures whose fleeting nature makes their presence all the more uncanny, implicating the viewer as voyeur in the visual game of hide-and-seek.

Hinting at figurative subjects from Impressionist paintings, and formulating cryptic titles from incidental sources including song lyrics and magazines, Brown oscillates between palettes of fleshy pinks and cool, verdant greens; isolated and grouped figures rendered as solid or translucent; and physiognomical features fully defined or represented by inconclusive smears. By freeing inspirations from their original contexts, she subverts the role of narrative in the construction of genre, and points to the slippage inherent in quoting from source. For example, in Hollyhocks that aim too high (2013), Brown recasts the subjects of Degas’s painting Young Spartans Exercising (c. 1860) into a lush green setting where limbs and trees intertwine; while in Combing the Hair (Côte d’Azur) (2013), the intimate boudoir scene of the nineteenth century genre painting is reimagined as a sinuous jumble of bodies that deliquesce into pulses of pinks, yellows, and blues worthy of a Côte d’Azur idyll.

Cecily Brown was born in London in 1969. Public colle ctions include Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; and Tate Gallery, London. Solo exhibitions include “Directions : Cecily Brown, ”Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, D.C. (2002); MACRO, Rome (2003); Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid (2 004); Museum of Modern Art, Oxford (2005); Kunsthalle Mannheim (2005–06); Des Moines Art Center, Iowa (2006); Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (2006–07); Deichtorhallen, Hamburg (2009); “Based on a True Story,” Kestner Gesellschaft, Hannover (2010, traveled to GEM, Museum of Contemporary Art, The Hague); and Galleria Civica d’Arte Moderna e Contemporanea, Turin (opens October 16, 2014). Brown lives and works in New York.

  • Opening Sunday, October 19, 2014 6 PM → 8 PM
08 Paris 8 Zoom in 08 Paris 8 Zoom out

4, rue de Ponthieu

75008 Paris

T. 01 75 00 05 92 — F. 01 70 24 87 10

www.gagosian.com

Champs-Élysées – Clemenceau
Franklin D.Roosevelt
Saint-Philippe-du-Roule

Opening hours

Tuesday – Saturday, 11 AM – 7 PM

The artist

  • Cecily Brown