Showing posts with label Lisa Brice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lisa Brice. Show all posts

19/11/23

Lisa Brice @ Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris — "LIVES and WORKS" Exhibition

Lisa BriceLIVES and WORKS 
Thaddaeus Ropac, Paris 
16 October — 23 December 2023 

Lisa Brice
LISA BRICE
Untitled, 2023.
Oil on tracing paper. 41.9 x 29.6 cm (16.5 x 11.65 in)
© Lisa Brice
Photo © Mark Blower

Lisa Brice
LISA BRICE
Untitled, 2023.
Oil on tracing paper. 41.9 x 29.6 cm (16.5 x 11.65 in)
© Lisa Brice
Photo © Mark Blower

Lisa Brice
LISA BRICE
Untitled, 2023.
Oil on tracing paper. 41.9 x 29.6 cm (16.5 x 11.65 in)
© Lisa Brice
Photo © Mark Blower

I like to think that my paintings are the antithesis
of misrepresentation – the reclamation of the
canvas by all the models, painters, wives, mistresses
and performers. The spaces I depict are dream-like
in the sense that they are fictional, but very much based
on reality and lived, sensorial experience.

— Lisa Brice

LIVES and WORKS at Thaddaeus Ropac Paris Marais is Lisa Brice’s first exhibition with the gallery. It is also the first solo presentation of the South-African-born, London-based painter’s work in France. In her latest body of work, Lisa Brice continues to challenge traditional representations of women in art history. Inheriting from and renewing the genre of the nude as painted by male artists, she transposes familiar scenes in an act of re-authorship that proposes an alternative to the power dynamics inherent in such images.

The characters and settings that appear in Lisa Brice’s paintings are built from diverse images collected from personal photographs, various media and, above all, art history, which provides a rich seam of inspiration for the artist. ‘All painting is a lineage – it’s all a conversation with what has come before,’ she says. Drawing specifically on paintings made in Paris from the mid to late 19th to early 20th centuries, in the works on view, Lisa Brice is responding to the work of painters historically active in the French capital, tying the exhibition at Thaddaeus Ropac Paris Marais to the artistic landscape of its surroundings.

Lisa Brice echoes and reimagines the figures and scenes painted by artists of that period, while reclaiming them from a male gaze that effectively disempowers women as passive objects of desire and refracting them through ideas of self-representation and empowerment. LIVES and WORKS nods to the spirit of personalities like Aïcha Goblet (1894–1972), as well as Suzanne Valadon (1865–1938), whose journey – from working as a model to painting nudes herself – embodies the reshaping of the genre and its spectatorship that characterises Lisa Brice’s own practice.

The title of the exhibition, LIVES and WORKS, is a play on words. Both interchangeable as verb and noun, the two terms recall the opening words of an artist’s biography or an artist index while simultaneously signifying the duality of the existence of the female artists/models whose essence underpins the works on view. Depicted holding paint brushes or palettes, or reflected in canvases or mirrors, Lisa Brice’s figures suggest a subtle yet powerful shift from subjecthood to authorship. By investing them with a decisive force in their own depiction, Lisa Brice ‘gives them back their agency and creativity’, as curator Laura Smith has written: ‘they look purposefully at their own reflections in order to paint themselves, armed with [...] cigarettes and brushes.’

Lisa Brice
LISA BRICE
© Lisa Brice

LISA BRICE studied at Michaelis School of Fine Art in Cape Town and settled in London following a residency at Gasworks in 1998. She has spent extended periods working in Trinidad where she participated in a workshop in Grande Riviere in 1999 and a residency in Port of Spain in 2000 with fellow artists Chris Ofili, Peter Doig and Emheyo Bahabba (Embah). In 2020, she presented a major solo exhibition, Smoke and Mirrors, at KM21, The Hague, which was followed by her inclusion in the lauded group exhibition Mixing It Up: Painting Today at the Hayward Gallery, London in 2021. She has presented further solo exhibitions at UK museums and public institutions including the Charleston Trust, Lewes (2021) and Tate Britain, London (2018). Lisa Brice’s work has also been featured in important group exhibitions at the Whitechapel Gallery, London (2022); Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, Texas (2022); Camden Art Centre, London (2016); and South African National Gallery, Cape Town (2016). Her paintings are found in major public collections including Tate, London; Whitworth Art Gallery, Manchester; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Smithsonian National Museum of African Art, Washington, D.C.; Johannesburg Art Gallery; South African National Gallery, Cape Town; and X Museum, Beijing. Lisa Brice’s work was included in Between the Islands at Tate Britain, London, in 2021–22, and is currently on view in Capturing The Moment at Tate Modern, London until 28 January 2024.

THADDAEUS ROPAC
7 Rue Debelleyme, 75003 Paris

13/11/21

Mixing It Up: Painting Today @ Hayward Gallery, London - 31 contemporary painters from UK

Mixing It Up: Painting Today 
Hayward Gallery, London
9 September - 12 December 2021 

Hurvin Anderson
Hurvin Anderson 
Ascent, 2019 
Acrylic on paper laid on board
© Hurvin Anderson (2021). Courtesy the artist and 
Thomas Dane Gallery. Laura & Barry Townsley, London. 
Photo: Rat Hole Gallery

Jadé Fadojutimi
Jadé Fadojutimi 
Cavernous Resonance, 2020
Oil and oil stick on canvas 
© Jadé Fadojutimi (2021) Courtesy the artist and 
Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London. Photo: Eva Herzog

Lisa Brice
Lisa Brice
Smoke and Mirrors, 2020
Ink, gesso, synthetic tempera, chalk and oil pastel
and oil on canvas mounted on board, 200 x 330 cm
© Lisa Brice (2021). Courtesy the artist;
Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and
Salon 94, New York. Photo: Mark Blower 

Mixing It Up: Painting Today brings together 31 contemporary painters whose work freely draws on varied image sources, techniques and traditions in order to fashion fresh and compelling works of art that speak to this moment.

Featuring three generations of artists who live and work in the UK, Mixing It Up: Painting Today highlights the UK’s emergence as a vital international centre of contemporary painting. Reflecting the international character of the UK painting scene, the participating artists come from a diverse range of backgrounds and nationalities: over a third of the participating artists were born in other places, including countries in Africa, Asia, South America and North America. Mixing It Up: Painting Today is also the first survey of contemporary painting in the Hayward Gallery’s history in which the majority of the artists are women.

Louise Giovanelli
Louise Giovanelli
Cameo, 2021 
Oil on linen, 36 x 25.5 cm
© Louise Giovanelli (2021) Courtesy the artist and 
Workplace, London and Gateshead ; Photo: Michael Pollard


Lubaina Himid
Lubaina Himid 
The Captain and The Mate, 2017-2018 
Acrylic on canvas, 183 x 244 cm
© Lubaina Himid (2021). Courtesy the artist
and Hollybush Gardens, London. Photo: Andy Keate

Kudzanai-Violet Hwami
Kudzanai-Violet Hwami 
Bira, 2019 
Oil on canvas, 150 x 180 cm
© Kudzanai-Violet Hwami  
Courtesy the artist and Victoria Miro

Sophie von Hellermann
Sophie von Hellermann 
Hope and History, 2021 
Acrylic on canvas, 200 x 190 cm
© Sophie von Hellermann (2021)
Courtesy the artist and Pilar Corrias (London), 
Greene Naftali (New York), Sies + Höke (Düsseldorf), 
Wentrup Gallery (Berlin). Photo: Ollie Harrop

Rachel Jones
Rachel Jones  
lick your teeth, they so clutch, 2021
Oil pastel and oil stick on canvas, 250 x 160 cm
© Rachel Jones (2021) Courtesy Thaddaeus Ropac 
Photo: Eva Herzog

Whilst this multi-generational group of artists doesn’t constitute a new movement or stylistic tendency, they share a significant interest in mining their medium’s exceptional multiplicity, and exploiting its potential as a format in which things can be mixed up as in no other. They frequently create works that sit in between existing categories and genres, and that fashion unexpected associations between the past and the present. Rather than aiming to craft iconic images, they treat the canvas as a site of assemblage where references converge from diverse sources, including advertising, vernacular and documentary photography, viral memes, fashion, medical manuals and cinema, as well as art history. Using the medium as a platform for speculative thinking and unexpected conversations, their paintings oscillate between observation and invention, depiction and allegory, illusion and materiality. Exploring fissures in our conventional ways of looking and thinking, including our conceptions of gender, race and identity, their paintings hint at different ways of thinking about the relationship between individual and collective identities, as well as between self and other.

Allison Katz
Allison Katz 
Adult Services, 2019  
Oil, acrylic and iridescent pigments on linen, 200 x 160 cm
© Allison Katz (2021)
Courtesy the artist and The Approach, London

Oscar Murillo
Oscar Murillo
 
manifestation, 2019-2020 
Oil, oil stick, cotton thread and graphite on canvas, 
velvet and linen, 255 x 155 cm
© Oscar Murillo (2021). Courtesy the artist
and David Zwirner. Photo: Jack Hems

Matthew Krishanu
Matthew Krishanu 
Two Boys (Church Tower), 2020
Oil on canvas, 45 x 35 cm
© Matthew Krishanu (2021)
Photo: Peter Mallet
Ralph Rugoff, Director at the Hayward Gallery, says: “If painting is typically pigeon-holed as the most conservative and traditional of art forms, the artists in Mixing It Up offer evidence for a contrary point of view: that in fact painting - thanks to some of its unique characteristics - may in fact be the medium that accommodates the most conceptually adventurous thinking.”
Mixing It Up: Painting Today features 31 artists: Tasha Amini, Hurvin Anderson, Alvaro Barrington, Lydia Blakeley, Gabriella Boyd, Lisa Brice, Gareth Cadwallader, Caroline Coon, Somaya Critchlow, Peter Doig, Jadé Fadojutimi, Denzil Forrester, Louise Giovanelli, Andrew Pierre Hart, Lubaina Himid, Kudzanai-Violet Hwami, Merlin James, Rachel Jones, Allison Katz, Matthew Krishanu, Graham Little, Oscar Murillo, Mohammed Sami, Samara Scott, Daniel Sinsel, Caragh Thuring, Sophie von Hellermann, Jonathan Wateridge, Rose Wylie, Issy Wood and Vivien Zhang.

The exhibition is accompanied by a catalogue with original texts by Jeremy Atherton Lin, Martha Barratt, Ben Eastham, Emily LaBarge, Rosanna Mclaughlin, Rianna Jade Parker and Ralph Rugoff.

Mixing It Up is curated by Hayward Gallery Director Ralph Rugoff, with Assistant Curator Phoebe Cripps and Curatorial Assistant Thomas Sutton.

HAYWARD GALLERY
Southbank Centre, Belvedere Road, London, SE1 8XX