November 2019 Edition


Upcoming Solo & Group Shows


11/7-12/7 | Lyons Wier Gallery | New York, NY

Good Fortune

Texture and color cascade together in an exploration of feminine identity.

La Chambre de Roya, oil, flashe, colored pencil and acrylic ink on canvas, 50 x 40"A cacophony of color and texture cascades all around Brooklyn artist Kira Nam Greene’s paintings. Paisley, art deco, avant-garde, Mondrian-like abstraction, check and trellis, brocade and floral, quilted squares, foliage, decorative objects—it’s a cataclysmic mash-up of style and design that seems to explode within every square inch of Greene’s creations. And yet, never lost in the beautiful madness of color are her female figures, each resiliently anchored within the vibrant world that has grown around them.“I actually have no idea how the picture will turn out when I start it,” Greene says. “I just know to start with the figure, then I give myself problems that I can solve. But it always comes back to the figure.”Ellen’s Niche with a Gaze, oil, flashe, colored pencil and acrylic ink on canvas, 60 x 40"Greene’s new show, Women in Possession of Good Fortune, will highlight her new figure paintings beginning November 7 at Lyons Wier Gallery in New York City. The new works will primarily be from her series Tribal Council, which has evolved from still life works to these larger figure pieces. “The subjects are women in creative fields, posed to echo historical figurative paintings. Interviews and research into their working lives generate ways for me to render pictorially—through allusions, icons, objects, patterns and symbols—the rich pershonhood of my subjects,” Greene says. “I depict the human figure in a meticulously realist style at the center of the compositions, surrounding them with design elements from widely dispersed cultures as a testament to the deep history of transnational cultural exchanges.”Doria’s Golden Years, oil, flashe, markers and acrylic ink on canvas, 40 x 50"While the design elements are meant to invoke many different cultures, they are also there as a juxtaposition for everything else in the painting, even clashing elements that seem to exist in a strange discordant harmony. And color is everywhere. “When searching for ways to present the feminist perspective in various ways throughout my career, I discovered color was a way that I could express feminine identity,” Greene says. “So I then take all those decorative elements and weird little details and paint them as these mysterious little objects that are very strange to me. My sitter is a part of this process, and our intimate session together reflects our converasation and history together. My sitters bring their stories with them, and they are important sources for me.” — Kyung’s Gift in Pojagi, oil, flashe, colored pencil and acrylic ink on canvas, 50 x 40"Lyons Wier Gallery  542 W. 24th Street • New York, NY 10011 • (212) 242-6220 •
www.lyonswiergallery.com 

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