installation view, Jennifer Riley at 485 Madison Avenue

installation view, Jennifer Riley at 485 Madison Avenue

installation view, Jennifer Riley at 485 Madison Avenue

JENNIFER RILEY

Machine Series No 2, 2017

oil on canvas

74h x 84w in
187.96h x 213.36w cm

JR001

JENNIFER RILEY

Machine Series No 1, 2016-17

oil on canvas

74h x 84w in
187.96h x 213.36w cm

JR002

JENNIFER RILEY

Jennifer Riley, Machine Series No.5, 2018

oil on canvas

68h x 72w in
172.72h x 182.88w cm

JR007

JENNIFER RILEY

Machine Series No 3, 2017

Oil one canvas

74h x 84w in
187.96h x 213.36w cm

JR009

JENNIFER RILEY

Machine Series (small) No 4, 2017

Oil on canvas

22h x 20w in
55.88h x 50.80w cm

JR012

JENNIFER RILEY

Jennifer Riley, Machine Series No.6, 2018

oil on canvas

68h x 72w in
172.72h x 182.88w cm

JR014

JENNIFER RILEY MACHINE SERIES PAINTINGS

presented by Silas von Morisse

@ 485 Madison Avenue - ChaShaMa (Space to Present)

November 28 - December 15, 2018

Silas von Morisse gallery is very pleased to present JENNIFER RILEY, MACHINE SERIES Paintings. The artist first solo exhibition with the gallery.


Riley is known for her abstract and semi-abstract paintings in which the primacy of drawing, color, line, luminosity, monumentality, nature and the built environment thread throughout her oeuvre. The “Machine Series”, her newest work, uses found patterns of steel remainders from the auto-engine industry to become armatures for draping or delineating solid and veiled areas of color that explore possibilities for abstract painting, integrating concepts of technology, anthropology, industry and nature. The painterly traditions of lyrical abstraction, gestural abstraction, hard edged geometric abstraction and elements of realism combine in Riley's work, discovering a sweet spot in abstraction that speaks to a world that has grown more complex with the migration of people, cultures, ideas and technologies. About the new work Riley wrote: "As the eye seeks to find form, a sense of location, a hint of content, it will eventually discover the ordering principle that structures everything on my canvas. What happens if this is contradicted by evidently free and open improvisation? What dance might be engendered between the two? Can I make paintings that give a viewer the sense that they are discovering something for the first time?” 

 

In his description of Eugene Delacroix's life work, Charles Baudelaire writes about the large works of artists of the time as machines. Delacroix himself referred to some of his large works as machines as they have many different objects, people and qualities that had to be structured and painted with immense precision for the work to succeed. When Riley began touching the steel remainders, considering what to do with them, she was aware that they are related to very different kinds of machines: the gas and Diesel engine. This work represents a folding together of concerns that have been present in her work since the start with new information which include issues of industry, technology and anthropology. Earlier work saw structuring elements and motifs that were drawn from responses to both nature and culture - (culture as in architecture, sculpture and painting).  In the "Machine Series", found pattern becomes the organizing principle and springboard to concept. The pre-determined shapes from laser-cut sheets of steel are by-products of the auto-engine production. Adding "industry" as content to on-going issues of culture and nature increases potential for the studio, long engaged with formal problems of fusing (painterly) language, systems and principles of order with that of improvisation. The found patterns of the steel remainders become new armatures for draping or delineating solid or veiled areas of color, simultaneously evoking the figure, landscape industry and technology.

 

 

ABOUT THE ARTIST / JENNIFER RILEY (b. 1965 Sharon, Connecticut)

 

In addition to making abstract paintings, large-scale steel sculptural projects have developed from Riley's studio practice. She recently unveiled a 65' x 8' x 8' long permanent commission at Mercedes House in Manhattan NYC, and a 50' x 18' x 8' steel installation for Cummins Inc., in Indianapolis. The sculptures, titled "Big Bright Steel”, are made of repurposed laser-cut sheets of steel from the auto-engine industry executed in collaboration with a colleague.  Riley’s work has earned critical attention for her solo exhibitions in New York, Boston, Washington D.C., Las Vegas and across the US. In 2017, she received a three year studio space subsidy grant from Two Trees Cultural Foundationin Dumbo, New York. In 2004, Riley received the Award in Painting from the Massachusetts State Cultural Council. Riley’s work is held in many public, corporate and private collections.  Riley received her MFA from The Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts-Bard College, 2001, BFA from Tufts and The School of the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, MA in 1991, and a Diplôme Superieur d’Etudes Francaises 1986, Université de Rouen, Rouen, France. Riley is active as a teacher, curator, panelist and guest critic. For many years at the Harvard Graduate School of Design Riley co-developed and led the Rome Seminar in Rome (1996-2013). She has taught at Indiana University, Pratt Institute, MICA, Columbia and Yale, MIT, RISD among others. Riley is a contributing editor at ArtCritical.com, Chairwoman of the Board of Directors of Triangle Arts Association, an independent curator in NYC and at Indiana University Center for Art+Design in Columbus, IN. She is also an Essayist who has written numerous exhibition catalogue essays for contemporary artist. Riley has written critical reviews for Artcritical, the New York Sun and the Brooklyn Rail. Riley lives and works in Brooklyn NY.

Press

ARTSY For Galleries, Online Viewing Rooms Are About Storytelling and Sales Scott Indrisek Dec 27, 2019
TWO COATS OF PAINT by Sharon Butler Catalogue essay: Jennifer Riley’s Machine Series Paintings
January 27, 2019
TWO COATS OF PAINT by Sharon Butler Elizabeth Hazan and Jennifer Riley at Janet Kurnatowski
September 29, 2011