Brian Reed
Metamorphosis
November 20 - December 11, 2009
Reception:
Thursday December 3, 2009 6-8 PM
Press Release
New York-based artist, Brian Reed’s work moves between extremes that share a psychedelic color palette and kinetic sense of movement and energy. Always working from those visual constants, Reed experiments with traditional, region-specific aesthetic styles, like the torturous, surreal bodies found in the cultural production of certain regions of western Africa, or the motifs and myths from some Meso-American populations. Adding personal touches to these disparate narratives, Reed incorporates his personal autobiography, and cites influences by other artists such as Kiki Smith or Egon Sheila. Certain compositions suggest wounded, vulnerable introspection, with figures folded into poses of pain, fear and confusion. Elsewhere, Reed channels the inherent optimism and energy of his favored color scheme to create shimmering, ebullient landscapes where hues, forms and figures coexist more harmoniously. Whether dark or upbeat, his paintings offer fascinating psychological portraits that are impossible to ignore.
Brian Reed currently studies Pre-Columbian and Afro-Atlantic traditions at Yale. His work has been exhibited nationally in museums from LA to St. Louis, and most recently at the Art Museum of the Americas in Washington D.C.
Artist Statement
After years of struggle, I have arrived at a very intimate understanding of art. Human expression, to me, is a journey of change and metamorphosis. It is both a feast and a famine, a force of liberation and a theater of depravity. In the past eight years, I have used art as a mirror of my internal emotional process, to paint with broad, brilliant strokes my own process of coming to terms with suffering and frailty, and to celebrate the healing properties of art within the world. In my work, I combine rich mythologies and folklore with my personal experiences to illustrate the kindred bond that all cultures, regardless of time and civilization, share — the struggle to grapple with themes of violence, sexuality, death and afterlife. My art allows me to embrace the human heritage of myth, faith and suffering and to translate this understanding into an engaging visual experience.
Invitation to the exhibition
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Artists in this exhibition
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