With the Shark Girls and their accompanying imagery, Casey Riordan Millard examines the search for solace from the heartbreak of mortality. In XOX, the titular painting of Ann Worthing's upcoming exhibition, these two letters are buried within a verdant, painterly field: Xs and Os can stand for kisses and hugs.
Casey Riordan Millard
That's Odd, I Feel So Alive
painting, drawing, sculpture
Mortality is a constant partner. With the Shark Girls and their accompanying imagery, Casey Riordan Millard examines the search for solace from
the heartbreak of mortality. While we may find temporary distractions in nature, the routine of everyday living and the trappings of Western
culture, these distractions are only external. A deeper relief from the human condition must come from within if we wish to ease our fears about
our impermanence.
The predicament of the Shark Girl is that she never faces her inner turmoil and, instead, continues the outward quest for diversion. While she is
sorrowful, wandering, and terrified, there is a comic element to this “fish out of water.” We can relate to Shark Girl in our own pursuits for
satisfaction and tranquility Casey Riordan Millard graduated with a BFA from Ohio University, Athens, Ohio in 1994. She has exhibited her large-scale installations, ceramic works, paintings and drawings in galleries throughout the United States including the Fuller Craft Museum, Brocton, Massachusetts,
Cincinnati Art Museum, John Michael Kohler Center for the Arts, Sheboygan, Wisconsin and Packer Schopf Gallery. Her work has been featured in the publications New American Paintings and 500 Ceramic Sculptures. In 2009 she received an Efroymson Contemporary Art Fellowship.
Currently, she lives and works in Cincinnati, Ohio.
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Ann Worthing
XOX
Painting
In XOX, the titular painting of Ann Worthing’s upcoming exhibition, these two letters are buried within a verdant, painterly field. Xs and Os can
stand for kisses and hugs, or they might conjure the children’s game of Tic-tac-toe, associations that bring with them an air of romance and
whimsy. Such feelings pervade the world that Worthing evokes, populated as it is by blooming flowers, fragments of Classical architecture, owls,
deer and hares.
However, upon closer inspection, these pastoral, fairytale landscapes shift shape into the surreal and unsettling: flowers transform into eyeballs,
tree trunks into human legs, and a hare puffs away on a cigar. What seemed familiar from fables and shared dreams suddenly becomes alien
and nightmarish. This nesting of images, with each forming the basis for the next, produces vertiginous ladders of association. Worthing’s
painting opens up the world of appearances into psychological flux.
The suggestion of mythology and metaphor is countered by an equal emphasis on composition and medium. Imagery accumulates into dense,
shimmering tapestries of paint that captivate beyond the level of subject matter. If modern and contemporary painting has shuttled between
intuitive, transcendent impulses on the one hand, and rational, materialist tenets on the other, then Worthing occupies a space in between,
where paint is mobilized for its abilities to simultaneously transport us elsewhere and ground us in its own specificity.
The Xs and Os, strewn as they are across the landscape, without ever appearing side by side, are also letters that do not quite form a word: the
potential for language rather than its full realization. Imagery is equally open-ended. A camera, a windmill, and a bedraggled Christmas tree
refuse to settle into any prescribed meaning, instead creating a nascent narrative. Standing on the verge of language and representation, these
paintings offer pure visual data for the viewer to name, grasp and shape him or herself. To complicate things further, the way in which the works
continually generate new meanings is thematized in the imagery itself, which abounds with references to fertility, including rabbits, rivers, and
abundant vegetation.
In holding fantasy and formalism in suspension, Worthing’s recent paintings allow us to immerse ourselves in their volatile vision of the
picturesque while also asking us to critically examine the process of perception. Ultimately, these works reveal that the visual can never be fully
grasped by the verbal, being suggestively fluid and mysterious.
- Antonia Pocock, NYC, 2011
Ann Worthing received her BFA from Southwestern University from Georgetown, TX in 1980 and her MFA from the University of Chicago in
1982. She is represented by Packer Schopf Gallery in Chicago and has also exhibited in New York, Boston, and Chattanooga. In 1996 she had a
one-person show at the Chicago Cultural Center. She is currently a Teaching Artist and Fellow at Marwen in Chicago.
Image: Casey Riordan Millard
Reception: Friday, April 1st 5 - 8 PM
Packer Schopf Gallery
942 W. Lake St - Chicago
Gallery Hours: Tuesday - Saturday 11:00am to 5:30pm