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manumission
Perry Rubenstein Gallery
12 February - 16 March
2010
Press Release
Perry Rubenstein Gallery is pleased
to announce an exhibition of new paintings by Annie Kevans at 527
West 23rd Street. The exhibition will be comprised of some 30 new
works, all painted within the past year.
The title of the exhibition is
Manumission, a term with a complex history. Manumission refers
specifically to a slave owner’s ability or discretion to free a
slave. That power, in the hands of the men that wielded it, is the
same power exercised by the philanderer in the choosing and the
dismissal of his mistress.
The paintings in this exhibition are
all portraits; most depict the illegitimate children of various
Presidents of the United States, others their mistresses. Many, such
as Sally Hemings and Grace Kelly, are well known. Others are
considerably less so, and even less so are their children. Through
these works, Kevans explores the representation of power, the lack
thereof, and its manipulation in the hands of those who posses it.
Having an affinity for the marginalized, Kevans paints figures
overlooked, exploited, or objectified within the context of history
or contemporary culture, imbuing her subjects with a tangible
humanity and sensuality.
Kevans’ wide-eyed rendition of
William Beverly Hemings conveys an innocence that arrests its
viewer, yet exposes dark themes that belie its surface. William, the
son of Sally Hemings, is believed to have been fathered by Thomas
Jefferson. With William’s startled and seemingly innocuous gaze,
Kevans alludes to the injustice and hypocrisy perpetrated by one of
the most revered figures in American History.
Kevans looks to historical texts,
illustrations, or photographs for source material, when possible.
Yet as is often the case with figures that have been all but
forgotten or perhaps deliberately omitted from history, she
visualizes characters by borrowing features from life models; in
effect, lending a face to the faceless and casting light on issues
that are uncomfortable and thus ignored.
Annie Kevans paints her subjects in a
manner so elegant and yet subtle that she allows the character of
both the medium and the subject to speak for themselves. Given their
incredibly rich individual histories, their manifestations are as
incredible as the feat of their rendering. Kevans’ work is indeed as
conceptually rigorous as it is arresting.
The exhibition of Annie Kevans’
paintings opens one day before the celebration of Presidents’ Day
Weekend, February 11th, 2010.
British artist Annie Kevans was born
in Cannes, France and lives and works in London. Past solo
exhibitions include Vamps and Innocents, Galleria Antonio Ferrara,
Vienna (2007); Swans, 319 Portobello Road, London (2007); and Girls,
Studio 1.1, London. Kevans’ work has been included in numerous group
exhibitions, notably at the Galerie Karin Sachs, Munich (2008,
2007); Galleria Antonio Ferrara, Italy (2007, 2006); Contemporary
Art Projects, London (2007) and will be included in the
much-anticipated Power of Paper at Saatchi Gallery, London (Dates
TBA). Kevans was a finalist for both the Jerwood Drawing Prize
(2006) and Women Of The Future award (2007) in the United Kingdom.
Perry Rubenstein Gallery
527 West 23 Street
New York, NY 10011
Gallery Hours: Tuesday – Saturday,
10:00 AM to 6:00 PM.
Members of the press please contact:
Jennifer Bono
Link:
Perry Rubenstein Gallery
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