The work of artist Amy Winstanley 'Lost Hap' is now on view at Margot Samel

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Monday, May 13, 2024


The work of artist Amy Winstanley 'Lost Hap' is now on view at Margot Samel
Amy Winstanley, Your Houseplant Loves You Back, 2023.



NEW YORK, NY.- Margot Samel is pleased to present Lost Hap, a new suite of paintings by Glasgow-based artist Amy Winstanley (b. 1983, United Kingdom). The exhibition title derives from Sara Ahmed’s meditation on happiness and its etymology in her book Living a Feminist Life (2017). Here, Ahmed traces the word’s origin back to the Middle English word hap, defined as luck or chance, asking how, in this current moment, happiness seems to have ‘lost its hap’, meaning its lightness and curiosity, its ease and unsystematic nature. Winstanley’s title itself has some of these attributes, at first registering humorously as a spelling error – hat for hap.

Ahmed’s text refuses to separate the personal and political, or mind from body, and she writes against the hierarchies, racism and sexism of our societies. For Winstanley’s purposes, this has implications for our understanding of the constrictive ways of being in the world that have led to the climate emergency. Hap is also a component part of perhaps, haphazard and happenstance, and with this body of work, she astutely suggests that painting might be a space where new connections can
be mooted and something of these lost qualities regained. As such, the artist’s stance is similarly critical to Ahmed’s, albeit more obliquely.

In the studio, Winstanley follows an open, meandering and intuitive approach. She doesn’t prepare for a painting in any traditional sense, instead she constructs a constellation of activity of which painting is one part – along with reading a book or making a drawing, listening to a podcast or looking at an artist’s monograph. Winstanley flits between these things, ideas filter between the tasks, and in the paintings a set of relationships gradually emerge. This attitude is key to the range of effects that surface in each work. There are speckled sections of dark maroon quilted together, swathes of blue dispersed by narrow vines of yellow and light pink, the stacked forms of a cultivated hillside, dark branches (as if lit from behind), and a hazy orange sun. Some marks find their place quickly, thickly applied or dry brushed, while other are worked in, mixed together, or overpainted. The white of an undercoat of gesso shines through thinner passages in the pieces, giving the colours vibrancy and the compositions a luminous aspect.

The cumulative result of Winstanley’s decisions is a set of complex natural textures and small vistas which resemble psychedelic landscapes – as if moving through a forest into a clearing, your vision temporarily affected by the change in light. This is no coincidence. Winstanley grew up in rural Scotland and was always surrounded by nature. This enmeshment was an important influence on her way of seeing and it comes to the aid of her

painterly work and concern with the climate crisis. Her paintings reflect the freedom and exploration of her childhood, and their ecological allusions point to a radical effort to find points of connection with the world.

They are full of mutualistic relationships, unexpected bonds and braids, elements embroiled with other elements – of things happening.

— Calum Sutherland

Amy Winstanley (b. 1983, Dumfries, UK) is based in Glasgow, UK. She received a BA (Hons) in Sculpture from the Edinburgh College of Art (2005) and an MA from the Sandberg Instituut, Amsterdam (2019). Recent solo exhibitions include: Moral Limb, Stallan-Brand, Glasgow, UK (2021); Grief Bruise, Lunchtime Gallery, Glasgow, UK (2021); Inscapes, AndCollective Gallery, Bridge of Allen, UK (2016); and Interconnections, Gracefield Arts Centre, Dumfries, UK (2015). Recent group exhibitions include: Strangers, Rongwrong, Amsterdam, Netherlands (2022); tangible/intangible, The Haberdashery, Glasgow, UK (2022); Potluck, Gallery 17717, Seoul, South Korea (2021); To All Our Absent Dialogues, Warbling Collective, London, UK (2020); Surge, Patriothall Gallery, Edinburgh, UK (2017); Fugue Lounge, Neverneverland, De Punt, Amsterdam, Netherlands (2018); Surge, Patriothall Gallery, Edinburgh, UK (2017); Every word left unspoken during the exhibition is the title, Neverneverland, De Punt, Amsterdam, Netherlands (2017); Spring Fling at Home, Gracefield Arts Centre, Dumfries, UK (2014); and Members Show, Transmission Gallery, Glasgow, UK (2015). Winstanley was nominated for the Sluijter prize for painting 2019 (Netherlands), and has been the recipient of the Hope Scott Trust
award (2014) and the Creative Scotland Visual Arts Award (2010 and 2014). Along with the artist collective ALKMY she has published short stories and images in What Ties Ties, Ties (2020) and What Thoughts Think Thoughts (2021) both through Print Art Research Centre, Seoul, Korea. Winstanley has an upcoming solo exhibition at Cample Line, Thornhill, UK in July 2023.

June 22 – July 14, 2023










Today's News

June 27, 2023

These bronze statues reveal ancient healing rituals

The artist making glassware with Solange Knowles and Saint Heron

The Morgan presents "Into the Woods: French Drawings and Photographs from the Karen B. Cohen Gift"

A new British arts venue tracks its city's changes

Métis artist Rosalie Favell creates her own kind of hero in new AGO exhibition

Rita Reif, antiques and auctions columnist, dies at 94

Why Mark Ruffalo and Wendell Pierce are fighting for a crumbling church

Bruce Museum first venue to exhibit Mark Dion and Alexis Rockman: Journey to Nature's Underworld

Santa Barbara Museum of Art is presenting The Private Universe of James Castle

The Hispanic Society Museum & Library unveils Jesús Rafael Soto's Penetrable in New York City

Laguna Art Museum has opened Joseph Kleitsch: Abroad and At Home in Old Laguna

Frist Art Museum organizes exhibition exploring how black identity and experiences are expressed in collage

USC Fisher Museum of Art announces the presentation of Kara Walker: Cut to the Quick

Troubetzkoy, Wyatt Jr., and a collection of Ertè sculptures highlight Moran's ReDesigned sale

Art Omi is now presenting Pippa Garner: $ell Your $elf

The thrilling programme for Shubbak Festival 2023 has been announced

The work of artist Amy Winstanley 'Lost Hap' is now on view at Margot Samel

CHART art fair returns to Copenhagen for its 11th edition

Philip Schuyler is knocked off his pedestal in Albany

Exhibition reflects on conceptual art in the San Francisco Bay Area in the later part of the 20th century

RIBOCA3 launches INTERMEZZO in collaboration with 44Möen

Rose B. Simpson: Counterculture now open at the Whitney

Brooklyn Academy of Music lays off 13% of its staff

Asia Society names new leader

Sale of the Stuart and Phyllis Moldaw Collection exceeds estimates

Five Essential Music Magazines to Get Featured in: Amplify Your Musical Reach

Jeff Glozzy Explores Differences Between Oil-Based And Latex Paints

5 Tips For Selling Artwork And Collectibles

7 benefits of painting for mental health

Tips For Achieving The Perfect Crunch In Nashville Hot Chicken

Essential Winter Clothes for Women: Staying Warm and Stylish"

How Tokyo Became a World Leader in Massage Therapy




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful