Its Rising Brings No Light. The artist diverse practice encompasses painting, sculpture and performance, which reference multiple artistic influences including dance, theater, and philosophy.
Eleni Koroneou Gallery is pleased to present the work of Liam Everett in his first solo exhibition at the gallery. Everett’s diverse practice encompasses painting, sculpture and performance, which reference multiple artistic influences including dance, theater, and philosophy.
For the current exhibition, titled “Its rising brings no light” Everett is presenting a series of paintings. This new body of work is a continuation of the concerns Everett has been engaged with over the past two years, including systems of support, threshold points, integration and resistance. Void of narrative, subject matter or reference as a point of departure, these paintings function strictly as a practice in which the intention is to remain acutely aware of the present. The paintings are manipulated both on the floor and the wall while unstretched. They are yoked: pushed and pulled to remain malleable, flexible and evasive. They fluctuate between fast/slow, hot/cold, additive/subtractive. The painted surface is always concealing its system of support, creating a brooding anxiety. Ironically, the complexity and depth of this system, which includes not only the stretcher but also the wall, floor and ground, appear deceptively silent and anonymous. When the painting reaches a point of awkward instability, Everett stops manipulating it. It is in this precarious place that the work itself begins working.
Everett’s work is undoubtedly influenced by the majestic landscape that surrounds his studio in the Marin Headlands, situated on the dramatic coastline of Northern California. In this setting, extreme climatic variation, including tides, temperatures, and dense fog, create the ideal platform for a more corporeal mode of working. Out of this context, Everett pushes his process to the edge of instability, where it persists, charged with a palpable and exacting energy that reasserts itself recurrently with each new experience of the work.
Liam Everett was born in 1973 in Rochester (NY); he currently lives and works in San Francisco. Recent solo exhibitions include: On Stellar Rays, New York (2014); Altman Siegel, San Francisco (2012); Paul Kasmin, New York (2011); White Columns, New York (2009). Recent group shows include On Stellar Rays (2015), Office Baroque, Brussels, Belgium (2014), “Color Shift” curated by Apsara DiQuinzio, Berkeley Art Museum, Berkeley (2014), Eleni Koroneou Gallery, Athens, Greece (2013); Galerie Andreas Huber, Vienna, Austria (2013); On Stellar Rays, New York (2013); “K” curated by Juan Gaitan at the Wattis Institute of Contemporary Art, San Francisco (2012); Josh Lilley, London (2012); 303 Gallery, New York (2010). Also known for his performance-based work, Everett has staged pieces in San Francisco, at ArtBasel 2009 and 2012, and at 179 Canal St, New York. Everett has recently produced a multiple with Paulson Bott Press in Berkeley, CA. He is an affiliate artist at the Headlands Center for the Arts and was also the recipient of the 2013 Richard Diebenkorn Teaching Fellowship at the San Francisco Art Institute and a 2013 Artadia San Francisco Council Awardee
Image: Liam Everett, Untitled (Noakhali), 2015
Acrylic, enamel, alcohol, and salt on oil primed linen 195.6 x 146.1 cm
77 x 57 1/2 in
Opening: Thu Apr 23 8pm
Eleni Koroneou Gallery
Dimofontos 30, Thorikion 7
Tue - Fri 12pm to 8pm
Sat 12pm to 4pm