"Brain Flowers" - Solo Exhibition at Anglim Gilbert Gallery

Katherine Sherwood
Brain Flowers

July–August 2020
By Appointment Only - Social Distancing Rules In Effect

Anglim Gilbert Gallery
1275 Minnesota Street, San Francisco, CA 94107

Anglim Gilbert Gallery is pleased to present Brain Flowers, an exhibition of paintings by Katherine Sherwood. This will mark her ninth solo presentation with the gallery. For over seven years, Sherwood’s work has recontextualized still life painting tropes and Western art historical representations of the female nude.

Katherine Sherwood, Rear, 2020. Mixed media on found cotton, 81 x 101 in.

Katherine Sherwood’s lush depictions of human and botanical forms typically incorporate medical imagery, including the artist’s own MRI brain scans. Sherwood’s Venuses of the Yelling Clinic are distinctly varied in skin tone, body type, and physical ability. Her figures recline in a markedly relaxed manner, sometimes wearing a leg brace or carrying a walking aid – visibly free from the sexually expectant, male-centric gaze of her source material. These subtle and overt alterations highlight the abelist, Euro-centric conceptions of beauty that have dominated the study and writing of Western Art History for centuries.

Sherwood’s examination of these long-held biases takes place in every facet of her artistic process. She takes great care to utilize physical material, appropriate imagery, and alter subject matter in a manner that gracefully subverts problematic visual traditions. Painting directly on the flat, cotton backs of discarded artistic reproductions, Sherwood makes direct reference to education’s role in communicating how we assign cultural value and to whom. The reproductions, once used as teaching aids in Art Practice courses at UC Berkeley, where Sherwood is Professor Emerita, become physical evidence of the art historical canon’s many limitations.

Katherine Sherwood, Grasshopper (After Maria van Oosterwyck), 2020, Mixed media on found cotton, 70 x 57 in.

Sherwood’s insightful depictions of disability and use of found material, are further deepened by her ongoing homage to women artists of the 17th century Baroque period. Her series, Brain Flowers, borrows imagery from the works of Maria van Oosterwyck, Maria Sybilla Marian, Rachel Ruysch, Josefa de Obidos, and Giovanna Garzoni, among others. Sherwood’s interpretation of traditional vanitas paintings are twofold. Not only does she give new life to the work of women artists before her, who rarely received due recognition in their time, but she also speaks to the power of survival in the face of harsh certainties.

Sherwood uses the genre’s historical language, wherein opulent floral arrangements and table scenes allude to the inevitability of death, but to a more nuanced end. Ultimately, the incorporation of brain imagery lends these works a sense of transience. She writes, “If the skull suggests death in these historical paintings, then what do brains do? I used to think my use of brain-related imagery was an indicator of joyous life, but as time passes, I see its utility as a representation of life and death.”

Katherine Sherwood’s work feels especially poignant in our present moment. As we collectively work to correct systemic racial injustices and come to terms with the human body’s vulnerabilities, one cannot help think of the ways in which our visual culture has excluded narratives that can help lead us to a better place. Sherwood views her paintings as a path towards redemption, resilience, and, “the beauty we long for in our souls, our catalyst to care.”

A sneak peek into the studio of painter Katherine Sherwood to see her new "Brain Flowers" series, showing at Anglim Gilbert Gallery, San Francisco in July 2020.

Katherine Sherwood’s work is housed in the permanent collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, the Crocker Museum, Sacramento, the San Jose Museum of Art, and the Ford Foundation, New York, among many other public and private collections. This May, Sherwood received an honorary doctorate from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Previous honors include grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, and the Joan Mitchell Foundation, in addition to a Guggenheim Fellowship.

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Note: Brain Flowers runs concurrently with the group show Invincible Summer, also at Minnesota Street Project, in which Katherine Sherwood also has work.

Contact:
Anglim Gilbert Gallery
1275 Minnesota Street, San Francisco, CA 94107
anglimgilbertgallery.com
gallery@anglimgilbertgallery.com

Source: https://anglimgilbertgallery.com/katherine...