SAM MCKINNISS: THE PERFECT TENSE

David Kordansky Gallery is pleased to present The Perfect Tense, its first solo exhibition of new paintings by Sam McKinniss.

January 11 - February 23, 2025

McKinniss paints pictures based on pre-existing images found online, transforming visual building blocks of the public domain into open-ended—and paradoxically personal—documents of emotional life. In many cases, these images—which often encompass people and scenes from disparate corners of popular culture or art history—also pre-exist in the minds of their viewers. For McKinniss, the challenge is to re-invest these images with a material conviction that may re-establish them as sites of real feeling. Images that begin as relatively generic cultural products thereby become full-spectrum demonstrations of human experience.

As its title suggests, The Perfect Tense is oriented toward the past. The grammatical term refers to verbs that indicate actions which have already occurred, and the exhibition is accordingly taken up with themes of loss, even while it focuses on scenes that are, on the surface, defined by their hilarity, joy, or straightforward beauty. McKinniss creates the prevailing tension by juxtaposing various examples of outdated public relations, so that a painting of an open-mouthed, playfully surprised Julia Roberts might exist near a double portrait of Mark and Patricia McCloskey, of the so-called St. Louis gun-toting incident. Though each composition makes deft use of negative space, the contextual chasm separating one from the other alludes fundamentally to a brush with the void.

Each of the works in The Perfect Tense depends on its fellows to tell a larger story, a piece of an overarching syntactical structure encompassing the entire exhibition. This novelistic dimension of the work relies on each of the complex, even contradictory, shades of meaning McKinniss finds in images. This is true even for pictures whose notoriety or seeming accessibility means that they are passed over lightly by viewers who have already encountered them in their “natural,” digitally saturated habitats.

The original context from which any given image is drawn, even when it is easily identified, therefore becomes less dominant. Inasmuch as cultural observation plays an important role in McKinniss’s project, it is a mode by which the artist describes what it means to live, suffer, and engage passionately in the contemporary world, even if that world is defined, collectively speaking, by its constant pull toward the superficial read.

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