Walton Ford — A Very Rare Sight

Exhibition

Painting

Walton Ford
A Very Rare Sight

Past: April 22 → June 3, 2023

Galerie Max Hetzler, Paris, is pleased to announce A Very Rare Sight, a solo exhibition of recent works by Walton Ford. The paintings merge historical references with mass culture codes, drawing from literature, allegory and cinema. Most of the watercolours in the exhibition are accompanied by a drawing and a study, revealing Ford’s technical prowess as both a painter and draughtsman. Generally, a piece of text or minutiae sparks a curiosity that inspires Ford’s original compositions. Sometimes he conceives of an image for a painting after reading a single sentence. If there is something that resonates, or offers an opportunity for further enquiry into how humans look at animals (now, and throughout literary history) — there is a painting. The interpretation develops after the imagery is painted.

Halve Maen, 2022, set in 1609, depicts the moment when explorer Henry Hudson first entered New York Harbor in his ship, the Half Moon. In the sky above, a group of peregrine falcons collide at high speed. Ford envisages a prophetic scene, the implosion referring to the speed and greed of the emerging city.

In 1937, the Singer sewing machine company sold the logging rights in an enormous tract of Louisiana forest. The land held the last breeding population of ivory-billed woodpeckers, and was quickly reduced to a wasteland of baked mud, resulting in the species’ extinction. The Singer Tract, 2023, shows the birds looking into their former nest hole in a newly felled tree.

Ford imagined that the flying monkeys in The Wizard of Oz were actual animals that had evolved, perhaps in Western Africa. In his painting, The Original Nikko, 2023, a fictional narrative is inscribed at the bottom, imagining Nikko as one such monkey that had been kept by Louis B. Mayer.

How many foxes are there in England?, 2022, visualises a passage from Virginia Woolf’s diary. As in the Renaissance, Ford makes a single composition that explores a timeline; in this case, an entire day in Woolf’s life. Depicting both foggy and bright weather, the painting overturns clichés about mental illness where rain represents negativity and sun represents hope or improvement. The title of the exhibition also draws from Woolf’s diary entry.

Awakening, 2023, refers to an episode in the Panchatantra entitled the ‘Lion Makers’, in which scholars encounter a lion skeleton in the forest and endeavour to bring the animal back to life.

Mir Samir, 2022, was inspired by a brief passage in Eric Newby’s memoir, A Short Walk in the Hindu Kush. Newby recorded a local Afghan folktale where an ibex retreated from the great flood and climbed to the top of the mountain. As the floods drowned the earth, the water level rose to cover just the underside of the ibex’s belly.

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Saturday, 11 AM – 7 PM

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