Philip Martin Gallery is proud to present, Tape drifts and figures reach, a solo exhibition of new cast, wall-mounted, hand-painted sculptures by Katy Cowan. Katy Cowan makes her works with existing studio objects, altering the forms of these objects expressively in the casting process.

In the spring of 2025, Berlin-based artist Katy Cowan was invited to work at renowned German art foundry Skulpturengießerei Knaak, which has collaborated with such figures as Katharina Grosse, Jonathan Meese and David Zink Yi. To the foundry Cowan brought a variety of everyday objects, such as masking tape, cardboard sheets, and paint palettes. Cowan's palettes were complete with paint squeezes, scrapes and blobs - the result of days working in the studio. All the objects were cast via the lost wax technique. In their transformation, a range of information - from the grain of the cardboard to the lines of the tape - became visible. Cowan hand-painted the results, working expressively to bring out the textures and volumes via a dynamic application of oil and enamel suitable for both indoor and outdoor installation.

In some sense, Cowan's work relates to that of Jasper Johns, who also worked with the objects in his studio, sculpting and painting them in a kind of diary of ordinariness. "Take an object / Do something to it / Do something else to it,” Johns wrote in a sketchbook in 1964. Katy Cowan embraces a similar open attitude towards studio practice, noting, “I love incorporating accidents into my work and learning to react to them, to build off of them.” For her artworks, Cowan's body, studio tools and the events in her immediate environment serve as generative subject-matter. Her works investigate human experience; they suggest objects can be both physical and metaphorical; that an impression can take forms both indexically literal – like a metal cast – and expressively iconic - as much about image as form.

Katy Cowan moves easily between media, inviting us to think carefully about the ways in which the materials of art and life figure externally our interior experience. She writes, "Rather than presenting images as fixed or complete, I focus on the moments where form hesitates, gestures falter, and materials resist. These are the points where meaning begins to take shape, where surfaces record their own histories, and where time is made visible, tangible, and even contested." Katy Cowan's work engages both visually and intellectually, investigating the things around us, how we look at and think about them.