Brett Bigbee | RECENT WORK

Brett Bigbee | RECENT WORK

41 East 57th Street New York, NY, USA Thursday, October 20, 2011–Saturday, December 17, 2011

apples and cherries by brett bigbee

Brett Bigbee

Apples and Cherries, 2004

Price on Request

abby (torso study) by brett bigbee

Brett Bigbee

Abby (Torso Study), 2007

Price on Request

joe and james by brett bigbee

Brett Bigbee

Joe and James, 2001–2003

Price on Request

couch (detail) by brett bigbee

Brett Bigbee

Couch (Detail), 1990–1994

Price on Request

Brett Bigbee | RECENT WORK
October 20th through December 17th, 2011
Reception for the artist on Saturday, October 22nd, from 2:00 to 4:00 pm

The gallery will present an overview of Brett Bigbee’s (b. 1954) recent paintings and drawings completed during the past ten years. Included will be three large-scale figurative oil paintings, small-scale still-life paintings and related drawings, both developmental and fully realized. His most recent painting, Abby (2005 – 2010), depicts a pre-teen girl clad in a brightly-colored flowered swimsuit emerging from a landscape of dirt and leafy groundcover. The exhibition will include loans from private and museum collections and will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with text by John Yau.

Bigbee’s highly detailed and refined realism results in works of arresting psychological intensity and sensitivity that break free of the clichés and sentimentality too often associated with the genre. Yau writes: “Working on a painting, often for years, Bigbee always places his labor-intensive process at the service of the particularizing expression, at once direct and elusive, relaxed and introspective, open to the world and yet separate from it.” And speaking to the near metaphysical effect, Yau continues: “Stillness and change lie at the heart of the artist’s portraits: the aching desire to slow down time is spelled out in carefully effaced brushstrokes, which literally and figuratively caress each surface and trace each contour. Bigbee’s labor – an act of devotion – is essential to the meaning of his work.”

This exhibition marks the first New York showing of the Bigbee’s work since 2003.

For further information, biographical information or images, please contact Allison Hester at 212-755-2828 or at [email protected]