Places and Beings

Places and Beings

507 W. 24th Street New York, NY 10011, USA Thursday, September 12, 2019–Saturday, October 26, 2019 Opening Reception: Thursday, September 12, 2019, 6 p.m.–8 p.m.


On September 12, Marianne Boesky Gallery will open its sixth solo  presentation of paintings by Amsterdam-based artist Hannah van Bart.  Titled Places and Beings, the exhibition will include a  selection of new and recent paintings, including landscapes, portraits,  and still life scenes. Together, the featured works capture van Bart’s  incredible ability to elicit poignant sensations of mood, tone, and  atmosphere from seemingly indistinct subjects and scenarios. Over her  multi-decade career, van Bart has come to be recognized for her melding  of figural and abstract modes to convey both the physical and emotional  contours of a person or place. Places and Beings will be on  view at the gallery’s 507 W. 24th Street location through October 26,  2019. 

This exhibition will be followed with a retrospective of the  artist’s work at the Centraal Museum in Utrecht in 2021. van Bart draws inspiration from her personal experiences, gravitating  to a single fragment or fleeting moment. It is equally the initial  spark of interest and the open possibility of narrative that draws van  Bart. From there, she allows her imagination and her hand to lead  freely. For Places and Beings, in particular, she began each  work as a simple, small-scale drawing, establishing an initial visual  and conceptual thread for the final, larger painting. As van Bart works  her canvases, she layers meaning into the scene. Often, she paints and  then washes away details of faces, bodies, and landscape elements,  blurring the boundaries between foreground and background and giving her  paintings a dream-like quality. At the same time, she repeats certain  patterns and emphasizes particular lines and colors, helping to focus  the viewer’s eye. The overall sensation is one that suggests something  teeming just beneath the surface—a history or story locked within the  confines of the painting. 

Although the foundation of van Bart’s work is rooted in reality, the  true power of her work is in its enigmatic nature. For the upcoming  exhibition, van Bart will present a wide range of subjects and  characters, from desolate forests to wildlife to individuals who seem to  dissipate and become one with their environments. This marks an  important shift for van Bart, as she moves more deeply into exploring  landscape and figural interactions. In one trio of paintings, a single  teacup is produced at just slightly different angles. Its edges morphed  and aged, the teacup shifts within an open, undefined space. The subtle  alterations, including the deepening and lightening of the shades of red  in which the cup is depicted, produce an unexpected tension, inviting  the viewer to consider the origins and meanings of this simple object.  In another painting, titled Ghost, a wolf emerges from a tangle  of muted colors and lines that suggest a deep expanse of forest. The  wolf stares out from the canvas, conveying a spectrum of emotions as one  works to decipher the scene. Experienced together, the paintings  suggest a strange, otherworldly realm—one that feels unexpectedly  intimate and also distant and ungraspable. 

“I think I always paint places to be—spaces that capture a feeling or  memory and hold my stories. I want to know how my memories and feelings  look—what images they make, how the spaces they make open and close or  resonate in me, how they eat me up and therewith offer me the  possibility to be," said van Bart. “They are about my childhood and  about now. They are places where drawing, painting, and being become  one.”   

Hannah van Bart was born in 1963 in the Netherlands, and lives and  works in Amsterdam. Among her solo exhibitions are those held at the  Gemeente Museum in the Hague and the Cobra Museum of Modern Art in  Amsterdam, which were organized with accompanying catalogues. van Bart  has also shown in numerous group exhibitions, including those at the  Rubell Family Collection, Stedelijk Museum, the XIe Biennale de Lyon,  and at the Singer Laren, as part of the exhibition Van Cobra tot Dumas. She has previously been featured in a television interview on 4 Art  on Kunstuur with Dutch art critic and writer, Hans den Hartog Jager,  and her work has been covered in many art magazines and journals. In  1994, she was the recipient of the Royal Award for Fine Art Painting and  in 1998 of the Philip Morris Kunstprijs. Mostly recently, in 2019, she  was awarded the Jeanne Oosting Prize for Painting. As part of the award,  van Bart’s work was presented at De Vishal in Haarlem, the Netherlands.  A retrospective of the artist’s work will open at the Centraal Museum  in Utrecht in 2021. 

For more information about Hannah van Bart, please contact Gallery  Director Mary Mitsch at [email protected] or 212.680.9889. For  press inquiries, please contact Alina Sumajin, PAVE Communications and  Consulting, at [email protected] or 646-369- 2050.