Sikkema Jenkins & Co. is pleased to present stuff change, a
solo exhibition of work by Amy Sillman, on view at the gallery
from February 4 to March 12, 2016.
The exhibition will feature a selection of new oil paintings,
two dozen individual works on paper, a wall of smaller
drawings, and a cycle of paintings that begin as inkjetprinted
canvases.
In German, the word for "metabolism" is stoffwechsel—
literally “stuff change.” The artist, currently living part-time in
Germany, is interested in the idea of the metabolism as an
analogy for both the making and the viewing of painting.
Metabolism: a process by which the body changes
something from one form to another, the work of the body
itself, a process of breaking things down--which could also
be called a form of abstraction. This brings the artist to the
question: what is the work of a painting? In a recent essay in
Frieze d/e, Sillman says: "I would call it a metabolism: the
intimate and discomforting process of things changing as
they go awry, [as they] look uncomfortable, have to be
confronted, repaired, or risked, i.e. trying to figure something
out while doing it." This finding of form and de-formation,
transformation, destruction and re-building renders paintings
that are both delicate and tough.
Sillman began making animated digital drawings in 2010,
and found in animation an avenue for extending over time
the process of finding forms and narratives that her drawings
have been doing all along. Now, her analog working method
clearly indicates the interwoven logic of painting time versus
filmic time. Her paintings incorporate both fast-moving
changes as well as a slow, almost archaeological accretion of
dense layers often continuously changing for over a year.
Rather than endpoints, her paintings propose forms and
materials in flux—suggesting a continuously changing future.
With her newest working method Sillman sets canvases
printed with her own drawings next to each other like
animation cels, and paints loosely on top, thus blurring
distinctions between the handmade, the digitally modified,
and the mechanically reproduced. Inkjet on canvas is
commonly used in contemporary painting as way to include
photographic work, but Sillman uses her own drawings as
the base, and then loops back to hand-made marks on top,
thus returning to the beginning again and again. In doing so,
she reveals the self-reflexive aspects of time and process in
painting, and asks the viewer to look at painting not as a
final product, but as a vital process.
Amy Sillman earned her BFA in 1979 from the School of
Visual Arts, New York and her MFA in 1995 from Bard
College, Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. She has
received numerous awards and grants, including a
Guggenheim Fellowship, the Louise Comfort Tiffany
Foundation Award, the Guna S. Mundheim Fellowship in the
Visual Arts from the American Academy in Berlin. Her work
has been exhibited widely and is included in the collections
of many prestigious institutions including The Museum of
Modern Art in New York, The Art Institute of Chicago, the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the San Francisco Museum of
Modern Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.
Sillman’s first museum survey, one lump or two, premiered
at The Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston in October
2013. The exhibition, curated by Helen Molesworth, also
traveled to the Aspen Museum of Art and the Hessel
Museum of Art at Bard College. A hardcover catalogue
published by Prestel accompanied the exhibition.
Sillman currently splits her time between New York and
Germany where she is Professor of Painting at Frankfurt’s
Städelschule.