NEW YORK, NY.- Almine Rech Gallery is presenting the exhibition, Pictures of 'M.' and Other Pictures, Michael Hilsmans first solo show with the gallery.
A recurring figure in Hilsmans large-scale paintings shows a marked sense of vulnerability: With graying beard and balding head, the man hides himself from the viewer, lurking behind oversize foliage or covering his face with a gingham napkin. Only pieces of his body are visible, sometimes surrounded by other human partsa buried bone lies below the mans supine figure in M. with Laundry; an extracted molar floats next to his head in M. with Idioms (Tooth and Nail). Like Bolaños fictional painter who enshrines his own amputated hand in a self-portrait, the fragmented figure of M., a painted character in close proximity to Hilsman himself, underscores the bodys frailty, its awkwardness and mortality, and the disarming imperatives of being an artistthe discomforts of public exposure, the frequent mortification of self-expression.
Even in the paintings without a figure, the sense of an absent body is palpable in Hilsmans work. Well-worn leather boots perched on the edge of a swimming pool have a cartoonishly bulbous appearance, as though stretched by oddly misshapen feet. A tablecloth floats magically across the oceans surface, offering up an array of seashells and an abundant fruit bowl. Plants, feathers, blue skies, horizon linesthese elements assemble into a symbolic cast of characters that populate Hilsmans paintings, quasitheatrical backdrops for an absurdist play.
Working on unprimed linen, Hilsmans thin brushstrokes magnify the inconsistencies of this support, with its fluctuating absorbency and patches of roughness that catch and hold paint in unpredictable ways. Often inscribing words or titles directly onto his compositions, Hilsmans paintings disdain naturalism, continually drawing the viewers attention to the constructed nature of the picture plane.
In these magical-realist scenes, the plots of evocative narratives seem just beyond reach. Mixed-up and fragmentary, Hilsmans compositions juxtapose lemon-drop, Hockney-esque California sunlight with the dark soil below the cheerful landscapes, rendered in cross-section view. A pulled toothsignificant in dreams, according to Freud, as a manifestation of fear of castration as a punishment for onanismcoexists in the series with such guileless signifiers as a lone green sock and a clear blue swimming pool. This world cannot be parsed, only drifted though in a gentle haze of wonder, as feathers float through the azure skies, and roots extend into the hidden depths beneath the surface of things.