NEW YORK, NY.- Derek Eller Gallery is presenting a solo exhibition of recent paintings by Chicago based artist Rebecca Shore in the North Room. Intimately scaled and immaculately rendered, Shores paintings of domestic spaces mediate between disparate perspectives: interior and exterior, near and far, direct and obstructed.
Having recently moved from a shallower to a deeper space, Shore depicts everyday objects, furniture, artworks, and landscape features which incorporate pattern and recurring decorative motifs. A colorful hanging mobile, tree stumps, flowers and vases, wrought iron fencing, and a painting of the night sky make multiple appearances. Shores rooms and terraces exist in an isometric space, one in which geometric shapes are rotated and flattened, creating familiar but illusory environments. Vantage points shift from inside to outside, and graphic forms take on multiple identities. In one painting of a room, quadrilaterals are simultaneously cast as floor tiles, wall patterning, framed artworks, a tabletop, and a windowsill.
Rebecca Shore (b.1956) lives and works in Chicago. Her solo show Being There was at Chicagos Corbett vs. Dempsey in 2024, and she was also recently featured in group exhibitions at Luhring Augustine and David Nolan Gallery, New York. Shore was included in Private Eye: The Imagist Impulse in Chicago Art at Newfields, Indianapolis and participated in Touch and Go: Ray Yoshida and his Spheres of Influence at The School of the Art Institute, Chicago. This is her second solo exhibition with the gallery.