JERSEY CITY, NJ.- Jonathan LeVine Projects is presenting Its Wonderful Your Demons Came Today, an exhibition of new work by Brett Amory in what is his fourth solo show at the gallery.
Myths are the worlds dreams. They are archetypal dreams and deal with great human problems. Myths and dreams come from the same place. They come from realizations of some kind that then have to find expression in symbolic form. Joseph Campbell
In his latest series of paintings and sculpture, Its Wonderful Your Demons Came Today, Amory takes a drastic departure from his previous work to discuss personal explorations of philosophy, comparative mythology and religion, and the collective unconscious.
The artists previous bodies of work, Waiting and Twenty Four, focused on societys relationship to the urban environment while investigating the banality of modern living. Through a series of abstracted paintings (Waiting) and anthropological mixed-media sculpture (Twenty Four), Amory depicted the contemporary human condition both representationally and literally. In contrast, Its Wonderful Your Demons Came Today eschew these representational portrayals in favor of more abstracted explorations that contrast the artists formal training while also inverting the subject matter to internal introspection.
In this body of work Amory examines a variety of existential questions while also exploring the internal struggles that define both the artists psyche and the universal human condition. Each piece of work in this exhibition contemplates what it is to be human through a personal survey of indecision, obsession, loss, suffering, desire and fear. Simultaneously, Amory illustrates a syntheses by also exploring antithetical ideas of rebirth, redemption, growth, awareness, consciousness, and oneness in this highly autobiographical body of work.
A theme of universality intertwines the ten paintings and various sculptures in this show. Both contrasting and complimentary philosophies are depicted side by side, drawing influence from the Eastern teachings of Thích Nhất Hạnhs Engaged Buddhism and Pema Chodrons Shenpa Syndrome alongside Western concepts of the Platonic Ideal and the Jungian structural model of the psyche. Slipping even further into the subconscious and unconscious realms, Amorys contemplative paintings pull the viewer back and forth between a dreamlike state and the chattering roommate of distraction. These alternating planes are portrayed through a lens that blurs various moments and memories of the artists life with the viewers own.
The cumulative sum of these multifaceted influences find partial realization through the depiction of various totems and signs scattered throughout the work. These symbols are presented in a manner that is open to the viewers interpretation, and intentionally so, but also find root in a deeply autobiographical experience. Simultaneously, references to art movements weave throughout the narrative giving these new oil paintings a timeless aesthetic that implies both intentional naiveté and a sophisticated historical survey of time and experience, both personal and universal.
Brett Amory was born in 1975 in Chesapeake, Virginia and is currently based in Oakland, California. In 2005, Amory received a BFA from Academy of Arts University in San Francisco. In 2012, he was named Artist of the Year by The San Francisco Bay Guardian. In 2016, The Ft. Wayne Museum of Art (Indiana) presented Fort Wayne, American Monologue: A new body of work and installation by Brett Amory. In conjunction with Its Wonderful Your Demons Came Today, Amory will also have a solo exhibition on view at Luggage Store Gallery in San Francisco.