LOS ANGELES, CA.- Marc Selwyn Fine Art is presenting its first exhibition of work by Cynthia Talmadge, a New York based artist known for her paintings, photographs, and installations highlighting the dark side of Americana and tabloid culture. Using a biographical approach to her narratives and often focusing on a real or imagined character, Talmadges work exhibits a fascination with heightened emotional states, mediated portrayals of those states, and the spaces where they both converge.
In this series of nine paintings, Talmadge depicts the world of a 1970s American diplomats wife. Using her signature Pointillist technique, she documents her characters mental decline toward anxiety, paranoia and ultimately psychosis with scenes of a diplomatic mission and the ceremonies, aesthetics and protocols that surround it. The paintings are accompanied by groups of drawings mounted on three linen covered boards, ostensibly by the protagonists hand, each set representing a distinct period in the life of the Diplomats Wife: the idealistic 60s, the crazed and paranoid 70s, and the nostalgic 80s.
Talmadge conducts her own extensive research, and each series of paintings is a blending of fictional and non-fictional elements which allow for the viewer and the artists imaginations to intervene. In The Diplomats Wifes Optical Migraine En Route to the Luncheon, Kinshasa, Talmadge creates a faceted, Pointillist image of a diplomatic mission, mimicking the effects of a hallucinatory migraine. Protocol depicts the awkward, anxious moment when the Diplomats Wifes necklace falls to the ground as she digs a hole for a ceremonial tree planting in front of the Bangkok embassy. Other matter of fact depictions of embassies and official residences offer a glimpse into the day to day activities of her character, enhanced by a stippling technique perfectly suited to represent the protagonists anxiety and the tenuous nature of her connection to reality and the outside world. As Talmadge describes, Optical tricks mimic a salad buffet of symptoms, everything from heat stroke to psychedelic psychosis. The Diplomats Wife has always looked at the world through the wrong end of the telescope.
Cynthia Talmadges (b. 1989) works are in the collections of Columbia University, New York; the Mint Museum, Charlotte, North Carolina; and The Bunker, Palm Beach. She has had solo exhibitions at Bortolami, New York; 56 Henry, New York; Carl Kostyal, Milan; and Soft Opening, London, among others. Her work has been featured in group exhibitions at Office Baroque, Antwerp; Mana Contemporary, Jersey City; Hussenot Gallery, Paris; and Jeffrey Deitch, Los Angeles, among others. This exhibition is mounted in cooperation with 56 Henry, New York.