Sunday, April 22, 2012

Rebecca Morgan '' Cabin Fever'' @ Asya Geisberg Gallery

Rebecca MorganThe Smoker, 2012. Graphite and oil on panel, 26" x 22", $3,000.
Courtesy of the artist and Asya Geisberg Gallery




A very good show , with a great theme,  amazing  drawings, works on paper and paintings by Rebecca Morgan.
Go and see it! I think her work is very collectable and the time for it is now!
Congratulations Rebecca!

Asya Geisberg Gallery is pleased to present Rebecca Morgan: "Cabin Fever", an exhibition of paintings and drawings. Morgan creates a collection of characters and types, a cross between Brueghel's stylized peasants, R. Crumb's winking harlots, "Deliverance", and the inbred mutants of many a horror flick. Morgan takes her background in rural Appalachia as the point of origin for her personae - as they become uncultured tourists, or especially in her self-portraits, expatriate interlopers ambivalently negotiating their depiction. Morgan's more exotic rednecks inhabit a rural America where people exist intimately and potently with the wilderness, a relationship which urbanites can only smirk at and envy. Nature is either wistfully idyllic - the idyl found in a margarine ad - or the scene of demonically perverse debauchery. Morgan's style fluctuates between hyper-detailed naturalism, reminiscent of Dutch painters such as Memling and Van Eyck, and cartoonish caricature, which pushes the imagery to a ridiculous, repulsive, even absurd dimension. Jagged teeth, furry brows, corpulent bodies symbolic of sloth and over-indulgence, and a general air of dirty unkemptness all exploit the demonization of the Appalachian. Internal traits come to the surface, and while Morgan exorcizes her country folk's demons, ridicule mixes with pride and defiant celebration. In her alternately tender and aggressive depictions of herself, she bares all - a metaphoric exposure of her former rural character, or to prod the viewer to question their own position. Morgan reveres Frans Hals' paintings of happy peasants and Adrien Brouwer's fighting, laughing, and drunk lower classes. Similarly, Morgan's symbolic language and character types recall Dutch parables, which were meant to both entertain and teach a lesson to the middle- and upper-class patrons of such works. Morgan plays an intricate game of back-and-forth accusations: she panders to the same stereotypes that she herself contends with, and in a modern twist, acknowledges that she is laughing at the subject, the viewer, and our contemporary conflict of pining for a pre-cultural back-to-the-land utopia while sipping our Starbucks.


 Rebecca Morgan is originally from Pennsylvania, and currently lives and works in Brooklyn. Morgan received a BA from Bloomsburg University of Pennsylvania, and an MFA from Pratt Institute, NY. Morgan's solo exhibition "Where I Have Lived and What I Lived For" opened in 2010 at Gasser Grunert Gallery, and she has been included in exhibitions at Richard Heller Gallery, Montclair State University, and the Art Los Angeles Contemporary Fair. This will be the artist's first exhibition with the gallery.

www.asyageisberggallery.com

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