NEW YORK, NY.- Since 1972, Cynthia Hawkins has consistently painted abstractly and in series, exploring diverse literary, philosophical, and scientific influences through work that is rich in color and meaning. For her first one-person exhibition at Paula Cooper Gallery, Hawkins will present new paintings from her ongoing series Maps Necessary for a Walk in 4D (2023). In these works, the form of specific maps direct investigations into color and light, providing both an underlying compositional structure and a symbolic vocabulary that plays out on the surface. By manipulating the same maps within each work and across the series, Hawkins provides a consistent point of entry that guides the viewer to engage in extended looking.
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Hawkinss recent interest in maps originated with studies of Maori and Marshall Island stick chartsan ancient form of marine cartography that relied on memory and bodily navigation. While thinking about these alternative forms of mapmaking, Hawkins rediscovered preparatory drawings for A Walk in 4D, a sculpture she made in 1979 that explored similar ideas. At the time, Hawkins was reading about astronomy, physics and ideas of the fourth dimension: the mathematical extension of the concept of three-dimensional space. To illustrate this concept, Hawkins mapped a particular walk (from her apartment on West 83rd Street to the 86th Street subway station) and raised it on a 45-degree anglethe angle that commonly represents the movement of light through space and time. The drawings that preceded A Walk in 4D have become the maps that orient Hawkinss current body of work.
Each painting is executed in layers, beginning with a single map laid on the background that is then transformed into new iterations, forming a wide range of shapes and structures in vibrant, complementary colors. A grid is wielded to diverse effect across the works in the exhibition, from the fine, mesh-like grid in Chapter 3: Maps Necessary for a Walk in 4D #7 to the dramatically enlarged grid in Chapter 3: Maps Necessary for a Walk in 4D #3. In some paintings the grid is positioned parallel to the picture plane, while others are sharply angled to heighten the perspectival intensity. Amorphous shapes undulate between density and transparence and orbs of various sizes float between the layers, further disrupting the spatial legibility. Hawkins has paid particular attention to how the shape and structure of each composition informs color, which shifts subtly as different elements meet and touch.
Hawkins articulates the final layer of each painting in oil bar, isolating fragments of the map and drawing them onto the canvas by hand. The medium of oil bar is rough, almost rustic, and it allows the intuition and spontaneity of Hawkinss markings to come to the fore while providing a textural contrast between the smooth finish achieved by the brush. Balancing on the surface, these navigating lines enhance the depth achieved by the preceding layers and bring the fourth dimension into sharp relief.
Cynthia Hawkins (b. 1950, Queens, New York) received a BA in painting from the Queens College, City University of New York in 1977 and an MFA from Maryland Institute College of Art in 1992. In the 1970s and 1980s Hawkins was an important member of the communities surrounding the Black-owned New York galleries Just Above Midtown, Cinque Gallery and Kenkeleba Gallery. During this period Hawkinss paintings were also included in exhibitions at The Bronx Museum of Art, The Studio Museum in Harlem, and The Clocktower Gallery. In 2022, Hawkinss painting Moving Box (1975) was included in Just Above Midtown: Changing Spaces curated by Linda Goode Bryant and Thomas (T.) Jean Lax (Curator, Dept. of Media and Performance) at the Museum of Modern Art, New York. Hawkinss one-person exhibitions include Cynthia Hawkins, Just Above Midtown, New York (1981); Cynthia Hawkins, Frances Wolfson Art Center, Miami (1986); New Works: The Currency of Meaning, Cinque Gallery, New York (1989); Selected Works: 19901996, Queens College Art Center (1997); Clusters: Stellar and Earthly, Buffalo Science Museum, Buffalo (2009); Natural Things, 199699, STARS, Los Angeles (2022); Gwynfors Soup, or the Proximity of Matter, Ortuzar Projects, New York (2023); and Wander/Wonder: Maps Necessary for a Walk in 4D, Kaufmann Repetto, Milan (2024). Hawkinss work is in numerous public collections, including The Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; The Bronx Museum of the Arts, New York; Kenkeleba Gallery, New York; The La Grange Art Museum, Georgia; and the Department of State, Washington, D.C. She has received numerous awards, including the Helen Frankenthaler Award for Painting (2023); the Black Metropolis Research Consortium Fellowship (2009); The Herbert and Irene Wheeler Grant (1995); and the Brooklyn Museum Art School Scholarship (1972). Hawkins lives in New York State.
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