SPENCER SWEENEY: THE PAINTED BRIDE
Gagosian is pleased to present The Painted Bride, an exhibition of paintings by Spencer Sweeney.
September 13 – October 19, 2024
Conveying intense emotion through lively color and expressive paint handling, Sweeney maps the body’s physical and psychological spaces with a combination of enigmatic tone and audacious palette reminiscent of the Surrealists, and of Russian Expressionists such as Alexej von Jawlensky. Allowing faces and encounters to rise from his subconscious to the surface, he employs an “automatic” process that blurs the line between conventional representation and an abstracted charting of the human mind.
In the rear gallery, a set of black charcoal line drawings on unstretched, unprimed linen finds Sweeney portraying himself—in playfully self-deprecating style—adopting a sequence of consciously stilted artist’s model poses. These works resonate with an adjacent canvas in oils and oil stick in which a figure begins to merge with a landscape.
Throughout the exhibition, Sweeney also alludes to the history of art through the stylistic vigor of his compositions, in which he amplifies and distorts the vital strides made by William Blake, Édouard Manet, and Beauford Delaney (1901–1979) in staking out and problematizing the boundary between figurative imagery and abstract impression. There are hints, too, of the work of other artists including Francis Picabia and David Hockney.
Sweeney combines this immersion in the interplay of tradition and innovation with a restless drive to produce works that are both psychologically direct and revelatory of the creative process. By making use of gestural and textural application alongside a flatter, more graphic approach, and by alternating between intense color and shades of black, white, and gray, he questions the fixity of artistic strategies and styles.