Stylistically, the artist brings the stilted formality and patterning of early American folk painting into dialogue with Renaissance composition and the drama of the Hudson River school.
Six paintings
Guild & Greyshkul is pleased to present the first solo exhibition of Anna Conway. The six paintings on
view depict fragments from unfolding narratives in which ordinary people are suddenly confronted by
forces much greater than themselves, either due to circumstances beyond their control or because of an
unexpected momentary suspension of disbelief. The paintings are windows onto brief moments of
radical experience that take place on the job, while killing time, in transit—wherever we least expect
them. A man assigned the task of collecting obsolete aerial antennas from a vast big-box store rooftop
loses himself in a contemplative trance. A third-shift janitor tries out a push-up on a junior partner’s desk.
A kid sweeping up an outdoor food court has his life jeopardized by a badly–mounted inflatable
advertisement. The ambiguity the viewer senses in these narratives derives from our inability to know the
internal nature of the subjects’ epiphanies. We witness spontaneous disruptions in ordinary days without
being privy to the exact nature of either their causes or their effects. Often, these are the quiet moments
that change lives, the ones we are tempted to try to express before coming to the slightly embarrassed
conclusion that they are indescribable in their simple profundity: “How was work?” “Well, I… it was…
not… the usual.”
Conway is concerned with the emotional, poetic moment (usually stereotyped as feminine) in the heroicpathetic
lives of our underemployed sad dads, our wannabe thuggy little brothers, guys working
construction—the people (most of them men) who aren’t supposed to have access to fear or beauty or
melancholy or much else beyond whatever the job requires. She places her protagonists, often alone,
sometimes in pairs, in settings that are familiar but sit just slightly outside of the everyday. The paintings
are meticulously imagined and rendered using traditional oil painting techniques.
The scenes are
invented from scratch and as a result the paintings have a sense of everything being equally clearly
defined and in focus. Stylistically, Conway brings the stilted formality and patterning of early American
folk painting into dialogue with Renaissance composition and the drama of the Hudson River school,
seamlessly evoking everything from Rufus Porter to Vermeer to Edward Hicks to Rousseau to Martin
Johnson Heade. The palpable role of time and labor spent in the production of the paintings echoes the
relationship of work and routine to transcendence that is presented in the narratives.
Anna Conway grew up in suburban Foxboro, Massachusetts, where she worked for years in various jobs
at Gillette Stadium, home of the New England Patriots. A graduate of Cooper Union (BFA 1997) and
Columbia University (MFA 2002), she is 33 years old and lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. Conway’s
work has been included in group exhibitions internationally, including P.S. 1’s Greater New York 2005,
and has been written about in publications such as Frieze, Art in America, Modern Painters and Art
Review, where she was recently profiled as one of “100 future greats”.
Image: Copyright Anna Conway
Opening Reception: Friday, February 23, 2007; 6-8pm
Guild and Greyshkul
28 Wooster Street - New York
Opening Hours: are Tuesday through Saturday, 11–6pm.
Admission free