Mitchell-Innes & Nash is pleased to announce M\A\R\C\H, an
exhibition of Keltie Ferris’ ongoing series of body prints at our
Madison Avenue gallery. M\A\R\C\H is Ferris’ third solo show
with Mitchell-Innes & Nash.
Ferris began the body print series during a residency in 2013.
Contrary to the spray-painted abstract canvases for which she
is known, the body prints offer an avenue for Ferris to inject
herself physically into her work, both as a form of self-portraiture
and as an alternate means of mark-making. The
artist coats her body, nude or clothed, with oil and presses
herself against paper on the floor of her studio. She then
covers the impression with powdered pigment. The result is a
photographic yet fragmented impression, recalling an X-ray or
Xerox copy.
With these new works, Ferris continues to explore painting as a personal index and the literal
relationship between the artist and his or her work. Although initially one might point to Yves
Klein, in process Ferris’ body prints are more closely indebted to David Hammons and Jasper
Johns. Unlike her predecessors, however, Ferris’ body prints reject an easy gendered
identification of the body, suggesting a fluid and performative state of gender identity. Ferris
highlights the physicality of the process, subtly shifting the position of her body to create
impressions that range in tone from static to fluid, defensive to aggressive, and masculine to
feminine. The viewer senses the artist’s hand and, in turn, the objecthood of the prints.
Similar to her atmospheric layered paintings, the body prints also display a powerful perceptual
depth. The imprints float in hazy compositions that suggest the shadow or memory of the artist,
literally and figuratively. As no two prints are exactly the same, each work represents a multitude
of forms. Displayed together, the impressions present individual facets of the artist’s identity,
both autonomous and dependent. The artist calls into question the notion of seriality and the
existence of a true carbon copy.
About Keltie Ferris
Keltie Ferris is known for her mostly large-scale canvases covered with layers of spray paint and
hand-painted geometric fields. Characterized by a continuously expanding investigation into
painting, her practice considers a multi-planar site for constructed light and shifting space. In her
ongoing series of body prints, Ferris uses her own body like a brush, covering it with natural oils and pigments and pressing it against a canvas, to literalize the relationship of an artist’s identity
to the work that he or she produces.
Keltie Ferris was born in Kentucky in 1977 and currently lives and works in Brooklyn, New York.
She graduated with a BFA from the Nova Scotia College of Art and Design and an MFA from the
Yale School of Art in 2006. Recent solo exhibitions include Body Prints and Paintings at the
University Art Museum at SUNY Albany, New York (2016); Paintings and Body Prints at MitchellInnes
& Nash, New York (2015); Keltie Ferris: Doomsday Boogie at the Santa Monica Museum of
Art, Los Angeles (2014); Body Prints at Chapter NY, New York (2014); and Man Eaters at the
Kemper Museum, Kansas City (2009-10). Her works have been included in group exhibitions at
institutions, including Saatchi Gallery, London (2014); Contemporary Arts Museum of Houston,
Texas (2014); The Academy of Arts and Letters, New York (2014); Brooklyn Museum, New York
(2012); the Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art, Indianapolis (2010); and The Kitchen,
New York (2009). She was recently awarded the Rosenthal Family Foundation Award in Painting
by the Academy of Arts and Letters.