Exhibition of paintings by an international selection of artists opens at Sadie Coles HQ
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Saturday, May 3, 2025


Exhibition of paintings by an international selection of artists opens at Sadie Coles HQ
Installation view, JUNE: A Painting Show, Sadie Coles HQ, London, 09 June – 15 August 2015. Copyright the artists, courtesy Sadie Coles HQ, London.



LONDON.- For the summer of 2015, Sadie Coles HQ presents June: A Painting Show, an exhibition of paintings by an international selection of artists. The display traces various modes of representation that have come to define figurative painting in recent decades, or to move the medium altogether beyond categories such as ‘figurative’ and ‘abstract’. Bringing together artists of diverse generations and genres, the exhibition centres on the body as a contradictory object – graceful and abject, mundane and mutable.

Through a focus on artists’ figuring or reconfiguring of the human form, June: A Painting Show reflects the ways in which painters have increasingly dispensed with – or drastically conflated – the discrete ‘-isms’ and ideological camps of earlier generations. The paintings of Chicago-based Jonathan Gardner compress the styles and motifs of Modernism into flattened, near-cartoonish tableaux whose denseness is at odds with their dilation of meaning and mood, steering clear of either pastiche or homage. The portraits of late Welsh-American painter Sylvia Sleigh present their subjects in seemingly candid and ‘realist’ terms, while rebounding subtly against the conventions of portraiture and setting naturalism in tension with stylisation. The two female figures in Australian painter Helen Johnson’s Post-colonial Feminist Drama (2012) meanwhile appear dislocated both from one another and from the frieze of sketch-like historical references behind them, in what might be an allegory of the painter’s eternal predicament – squaring up to history and grappling with ‘anxiety of influence’.

Various works in the exhibition evince the impact of non-realist idioms including the decorative or the diagrammatic, while also manifesting art’s broader annexation of digital aesthetics and processes. Iraqi artist Hayv Kahraman adapts traditional Persian miniatures into enigmatic vignettes whose Arabic captions ground the scenes within contemporary reality. In the works of American painter Mernet Larsen, everyday scenes are wrought into boxy geometry redolent of origami or rudimentary computer models, teasing apart the age-old dialectics of illusion and surface, volume and flatness: “What you see determines how you see it, that has pretty much governed my whole life”, she has commented. “The content determines the form.” Pictorial space is more radically collapsed in the expansive compositions of Filipino artist Rodel Tapaya, in which figural and natural forms interlock into a tapestry-like allegory – bodies, objects and symbols commingling at the forefront of the picture plane. In the works of Iraqi-born painter Ahmed Alsoudani, teeming bundles of imagery (free-floating corpuscles, eyes, fragments of pattern) appear to press up against the painted surface, teetering on the brink of indecipherability.

This folding or flattening of pictorial space is paralleled, in many of the paintings, by a process of historical ‘folding together’. Resonances of Hieronymus Bosch’s Garden of Earthly Delights, Henri Rousseau’s exotic forests or Stanley Spencer’s pastoral dreamscapes flow together, for example, with those of Pop art and pop culture. Refracting art-historical influences in this way, many of the artists surveyed in the show acknowledge the inevitable historicity of their medium at the same time as affirming its enduring urgency. Throughout, the human figure articulates many of the fundamental contrasts (formal and conceptual) underpinning contemporary painting – between coherence and fragmentation, history and timelessness, or calculation and naiveté. Contorted, caricatured or multiplied, the body in its many guises comes to speak of the plurality and multivalence of painting itself.

June: A Painting Show runs from 09 June to 29 August 2015. Artists in the exhibition include Ahmed Alsoudani (b. 1975, Baghdad), Nicole Eisenman (American, b. 1965), Jana Euler (b. 1982, Friedberg, Germany), Jonathan Gardner (b. 1982, Lexington, Kentucky) Helen Johnson (b. 1979, Melbourne), Hayv Kahraman (b. 1981, Baghdad), Yamashita Kikuji (Japanese, 1890-1973), Mernet Larsen, (b. 1940, Houghton, Michigan), Ryan Mosley (b. 1980, Chesterfield, UK), Barbara Rossi (American, b. 1940), Pieter Schoolwerth (b. 1970, St. Louis, Missouri), Sylvia Sleigh (Welsh-American, 1916–2010), Rodel Tapaya (b. 1980, Rodriguez, Rizal, Philippines), Co Westerik (b. 1924, The Hague, Netherlands).










Today's News

June 12, 2015

Exhibition at the Thyssen-Bornemisza offers a new perspective on Francisco de Zurbarán

Kunsthaus Zürich exhibition with works by over 60 artists explores Europe as peace project

Spanish museum wins ten year legal dispute over ownership of Pissarro painting

Rare works with impeccable provenance lead Christie's Old Master & British Paintings Evening Sale

'Man Ray - Human Equations: A Journey from Mathematics to Shakespeare' opens in Copenhagen

Sotheby's to present Napoleon's last gift to his son: A superb pair of child-size pistols

MoMA announces the first comprehensive New York retrospective of Marcel Broodthaers

Major presentation of drawings by Roni Horn on view at Hauser & Wirth in London

China media calls on contemporary artist Ai Weiwei to change politics after rare show

Early photo albums and stereo photos from Imperial China on view at the Rijksmuseum

Alfstad& Contemporary unveils an exploration of the ways artists make Florida and Florida makes us

American Puzzles: Major exhibition of works by Burk Uzzle opens at Steven Kasher Gallery

Dallas Museum of Art announces Melissa Fetter as new Chairman of the Board

Record fine art sale and significant estates fuel Clars' second largest auction in their history

Raging Bull,' 'Rocky' film producer dies: report

All 239 editions of landmark feminist magazine published online for the first time

Indian contemporary art finds digital champion with launch of new e-commerce platform Full Picture Art

Grimaldi Gavin brings together photographs from the past 14 years by Tomoko Yoneda

Exhibition of paintings by an international selection of artists opens at Sadie Coles HQ

Buddhism, bombs and blouses: Japan's versatile 'washi' paper

Horror legend Christopher Lee dies at 93

Record price expected at Bonhams for flea-market find

Biennale of Sydney announces 2016 curatorial Attachés

Oxford marks 800th anniversary of Magna Carta




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
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

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