Elizabeth Huey: When We Kissed | Harper's Apartment
“An honorable human relationship — that is, one in which two people have the right to use the word 'love' — is a process, delicate, violent, often terrifying to both persons involved, a process of refining the truths they can tell each other.” – Adrienne Rich
“Love at first sight is a hypnosis…” – Roland Barthes
Harper’s Apartment is pleased to announce When We Kissed, an exhibition of paintings by artist Elizabeth Huey. A reception will be held on September 11 from 6 to 8 pm, and the artist will be present. The show will remain on view until October 26th.
In her third solo exhibition with the gallery, Huey remains deeply invested in the psychology of relationships and devoted to the construction of intimate allegories employing architecture and natural elements. Several of the paintings’ titles are taken from poets, including the confessional lines of Sylvia Plath, alluding to their inspiration and genesis. Akin to poetry, her tableaux explore a disjunctive space between the concrete and metaphysical. The title of the exhibition, When We Kissed, references Edvard Munch’s painting The Kiss, part of his Frieze of Life series that includes the famous painting The Scream. Huey identifies with Munch’s mission, in his own words, to paint "living people who breathe and feel and suffer and love.”
Huey's new series of paintings is a musing on the science of attraction and the complex emotional terrain of longing. Conjuring amorous encounters, Huey is shamelessly romantic with her visual metaphors, panoramic vistas, and windows of perception all to evoke the power of a passionate embrace.
Informed by history and literature, the imaginary settings, characters and palette change with each panel, defying the particularities of space and chronology of time. Huey works the paintings' surface into a thickly applied impasto of oil paint, sometimes directly with the hand sans brush, imbuing it with physical and metaphorical dimensionality. Suffused by an array of influences — the montaged love stories of R.B. Kitaj, the idyllic charm of Jean-Antoine Watteau, phantasmagoric figures of Leonora Carrington, and the intimacy of Édouard Vuillard — each painting represents a season within the unending cyclicity of desire and the meandering nature of relationships. Her kaleidoscopic visual treatment of couples frolicking within and without interior spaces is a conceptual reference to the mind and heart.
Born in Virginia, Elizabeth Huey earned an MFA from Yale University and a BA in Psychology from George Washington University. She studied painting at both the Marchutz School in Aix-en-Provence, France, and the New York Studio School of Drawing, Painting, and Sculpture in Manhattan. Huey has exhibited both nationally and internationally, and her work is held in museums and other prominent collections. She has been awarded multiple grants and residencies including the Terra Foundation Residency in Giverny, France, a Johns Hopkins University Travel Fellowship, the Artist Research Fellowship from the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C., and the Alma B. Schapiro Award and Artist Residency from Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, NY. Elizabeth Huey lives and works in Los Angeles, CA.
Exhibitions
- January 14, 2021 - February 13, 2021
Eliot Greenwald: Takin’ the Riverboat Out on Snake Lake - January 13, 2021 - February 13, 2021
Spencer Lewis: Six Jutes (2) - December 9, 2020 - January 9, 2021
Spencer Lewis: Six Jutes (1) - December 10, 2020 - January 9, 2021
12 Artists - October 31, 2020 - December 6, 2020
Kevin Teare: L’Ecole Horizontale - October 28, 2020 - December 5, 2020
Kevin McNamee-Tweed: Moon Over Math Town - October 10, 2020 - November 22, 2020
Michelangelo Lovelace: Brick City - September 26, 2020 - October 26, 2020
Angel Otero: Broken Record - September 24, 2020 - October 24, 2020
Claire Colette: Fire, Rain, Heat, Night - August 28, 2020 - September 28, 2020
Enoc Perez: The Fires - August 15, 2020 - September 17, 2020
Alejandro Cardenas: AEAEA - July 25, 2020 - August 27, 2020
Spencer Lewis: Literacy Devolves Into Violence - see all exhibitions