Kathryn Markel Fine Arts is pleased to announce an exhibition of new abstract paintings by Deborah Zlotsky, Genealogies. This will be her sixth solo exhibition with the gallery. An opening reception will be held on September 11 from 6-8pm.
Zlotsky's bold, new paintings build upon the graphic power of stripes. Stripes structure patterns, suggest cycles, and signify caution. They create order and grace. They also announce, in traditions of Western image-making, people who were marginalized, understood apart from mainstream culture.
In Zlotsky’s paintings, stripes don't always behave. Regular rectangular shapes mutate into dimensional, biomorphic forms. Flat, rigid shapes blur and sometimes become animated with fictional gravity, invented light, and trompe l’oeil passages like strings, shadows, and fleshy parts. These shifts call into question one's perspective. What once appeared to be the background now pops into the foreground; what once felt weightless now presses down on a support structure; what was once hard-edged now softens into almost familiar, life-like forms.
History manifests itself in her work through drips and smears, which act as records of time and wear. Zlotsky writes: "I’m interested in how history presses against the present and complicates how we understand both the present and the past. Abstraction provides a language of metaphor—as well as a sensory experience—for responding to the way we live on the surface of these continually accumulating pasts."