LOS ANGELES, CA.- Corresponding to the letters of the Roman alphabet, the twenty-six drawings by Henni Alftan in ABC depict common objects floating against monochromatic grounds. Each composition contains an object or array of items whose English names begin with the titular letterA (all works 2025) is for aspirin and ants, B is for Band-Aids, buttons, and buckles, and so on. The artist chose only objects small enough, in reality, to fit within the bounds of her approximately ten-by-eight-inch sheets of paper. Working with these constraints, Alftans visual alphabet engages questions of illusory and pictorial space, classification and hierarchy, and the relationship between image and language.
Without environments to orient them, the subjects of Alftans colored-pencil drawings invite morphological and conceptual connections, both within each frame and across her alphabet. In D, the dots on a die echo those on a pair of dominoes, the tines on the forks in F rhyme with the fingers on the glove in G. Categories can be read into various combinations: a Q-tip, inhalers, pills, nail varnish, and false eyelashes all speak to the maintenance of the body; legos and chess pieces to play; envelopes and pens to communication; screws, rulers, and a knitting sample to the labor of creation. Beyond taxonomies of use or alliterative initials, the possibilities for surprising or uncanny resonances between objects animate these works. As in her paintings, where tightly cropped scenes and fragmented bodies withhold access to seamless narratives, it is up to the viewer to find their own meaning in this evocative collection of objects. For Alftan, the world that might extend past the bounds of the framethe implications an image carriesis always part of the whole picture. A number of the subjects in the ABC drawings also appear in her paintings, creating yet another link inside of her often self-referential practice.
Alftan presents her everyday subject matter realistically, at one-to-one scale, a gesture that evokes trompe loeil (or fool the eye) painting. Unlike that tradition, however, she isnt relying on visual tricks like forced perspective or manipulated shadows. Just as her paintings depict plausible scenarios in a graphic, minimal style that sets reality at a remove, the flat backgrounds on which her dominoes, Xanax, and jelly beans rest declare that these objects exist not in real space, but in the space of the image. Presented head-on in what might first appear to be an objective, almost-forensic perspectivethe artist as crime-scene photographer, capturing evidenceis revealed by Alftans soft, hazy pencil strokes to be a subjective exercise in composition. As the Duchampian comb in C reminds us, the artists intention turns the everyday into art.
While the ABC drawings resonate formally and conceptually with picture books used to teach the alphabet, her largely wordless works speak to languages slipperyness rather than its logic. In N, Alftan puns on nails, as in the metal fasteners, and its homonym on our fingertips; the linear profiles of a hair elastic, hairpin, and hook in H suggest the outlines of letters and a question mark. Like hieroglyphs or other cryptic ciphers, these arrangements resemble symbols to be deciphered while confounding straightforward legibility. At times, the geometries of Alftans subjects push her compositions close to abstraction, only to be pulled back into representation by the objects that surround them. In P, a yellow, Joseph Albers-esque square is transformed into a Post-it by its association with a paper clip, its office supply companion. The juxtaposition of a sea urchin with a USB stick in U verges on surrealism. Drawing on both the elasticity and coded structures of language, Alftans drawings articulate a new poetics of the image.