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The Woods at Jennifer Terzian Gallery


I’m happy to say I’m returning to Jennifer Terzian Gallery in Litchfield, CT for another solo show. This time I will be bringing woods paintings to the gallery in April 27th - June 14th, 2024. Show opens Saturday April 27th, 3-5pm.

The Woods

 

I make labor intensive paintings of gridded dots.  These paintings frequently document fabric, wallpaper and photo-based source material.  My most recent body of work has turned to the woods as its lone subject and focus.

 

About four years ago I began working on an 8 foot tall image of Northeastern American wooded forest to use as a backdrop for some of my installation and painting.  I took three years to finish the first large painting in the series, made from a snapshot taken in an afternoon. The slowness of the process forced me to look over and over at this one charmed and well-lit moment in time.

 

During the forced isolation of the pandemic I sat with this painting, and began another, as I had no woods to go to, nowhere to experience the slowness of nature. I like to consider it a contemporary way of documenting our extraordinary woodland spaces of North America, in the tradition of panoramic and scenic wallpaper.  When I finished this painting, I installed it both alone and with other works as a backdrop.  I found a demand and need for woods imagery every time I exhibited the work.

 

I'm currently developing a show comprised only of woods paintings of varying sizes, mostly composed of New England woods that I have walked through on foot.  The works are made from digital patterns I make from photographs, which I then paint on a wet media acetate.  The patterns are derived from the photographs, but also abstract and blur the photograph to a greater or lesser degree, depending upon scale and complexity of the image. 

 

I'm looking for a painting whose marks land between textile stitch, Impressionist mark and digital pixel.  The paintings I'm making blur between a focused Photorealism, a computer-generated pattern and a fetishized repetition of an acrylic paint mark.  Much of what I do is mix and organize color.  There is high labor behind each work, yet the effect is immediate and present.

 

I want the experience of my paintings to be much like walking in the woods.  Surrounded by a fabric of green, an excess of detail, the labor of making the painting stands as a devotional homage to the complexity and slow growth of the forest.

 

The scale shifts of the paintings for me, function much like the jumps in time from walking in the woods to slowly experiencing a painting over days, weeks or months.  The painting space both slows you down to a single greenspace and holds you within many particular and singular snapshots in time. 

 

I hope to image the woods in its current state, as it exists now, near me. We have precious resources in both humble scrub brush or elegant old growth forests, all worth documenting as they are seen in our moment.