Jim Gaylord: Chiaroscuro

Jim Gaylord: Chiaroscuro

257 Bowery New York, NY 10002, USA Friday, April 26, 2024–Saturday, June 15, 2024 Opening Reception: Friday, April 26, 2024, 5 p.m.–7 p.m.


ballad by jim gaylord

Jim Gaylord

Ballad, 2024

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ceremonial cipher by jim gaylord

Jim Gaylord

Ceremonial Cipher, 2024

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twizzle mantra by jim gaylord

Jim Gaylord

Twizzle Mantra, 2023

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ceremonial cipher by jim gaylord

Jim Gaylord

Ceremonial Cipher, 2024

Price on Request

Sperone Westwater is pleased to present “Chiaroscuro,” the gallery’s first solo exhibition  of artist Jim Gaylord. The show of eight hot-pressed watercolor paper and cast marble and resin works embraces themes of iconography, formalism and geometry. 

With this body of work, Gaylord departs from his painting practice to create paper constructions that bring  his imagery into sharper focus. Using the blade of an X-Acto knife to hand-cut heavy watercolor paper  (produced by St. Cuthberts Mill in England), Gaylord defines a precise edge, forgoing the unruliness of the  brushstroke. “It attributes a certainty to the forms, and their volumetric construction creates a material  presence in space,” explains Gaylord. “There is no ambiguity to their physical shape, yet the elements  remain mysterious, neither completely abstract nor representational. Like Louise Nevelson’s painted  assemblages made from found wood, the monochromatic surfaces lend an open-endedness to the imagery.” 

Gaylord’s early experiments with paper cutouts were more two-dimensional, but when he began to notice  the interplay between light and shadow across the surfaces, he decided to incorporate this as a visual tool.  Chiaroscuro, the show’s title, refers to this phenomenon as an approach to pictorial representation. “I  began drawing on the tradition of bas-relief sculpture and references to architecture emerged,” says  Gaylord. “Living in New York City, I’m able to observe examples of high and low relief on the façades of  skyscrapers, churches and municipal buildings, and certain features have made their way into my work. Through years of exploring the capabilities of the heavy paper I use, I have developed a visual vocabulary  that draws references to these architectural motifs, as well as geometry, biology and anatomy.” 

The two cast pieces are fabricated with marble powder suspended in resin, cast from the original paper  constructions and recall the surfaces of stone reliefs carved into buildings. Some of Gaylord’s forms  resemble glyphs or symbols from ancient cultures, while others seem modern or even futuristic. “I like to  think of my compositions as a reference to the past while imagining the future,” he says. “I see parallels  between the logic of human design and physical anatomy, plant life and other natural structures. I think of  this work as a meditation on these connections, but also an attempt to find harmony among forms that  otherwise appear idiosyncratic or strange (like the parts in our own bodies).”

 Born in Washington, North Carolina in 1974, Jim Gaylord lives and works in New York. He earned his  MFA from the University of California, Berkeley (2005) and his BA from the University of North Carolina,  Greensboro (1997). His work has been exhibited internationally and is in the permanent collections of the  Berkeley Art Museum, the Mount Holyoke College Art Museum and The Museum of Modern Art, New  York. He has received fellowships from the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Joan Mitchell  Foundation and the Pollock-Krasner Foundation. Gaylord has completed residencies at MacDowell, Yaddo  and the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program. 

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