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05 December 2024
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Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann
Ewer
, 2023
40.5 x 41.5 in. (102.9 x 105.4 cm.)
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Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann
American
Ewer
,
2023
Katherine Tzu-Lan Mann
Ewer
, 2023
40.5 x 41.5 in. (102.9 x 105.4 cm.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
View to Scale
Zoom
Medium
Paintings, acrylic, sumi ink and monoprint collage on paper
Size
40.5 x 41.5 in. (102.9 x 105.4 cm.)
Markings
Signed
Price
Price on Request
Contact Gallery About This Work
Morton Fine Art
Washington
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About this Artwork
Movement
Contemporary Art
Provenance
Artist's studio to Morton Fine Art
Exhibitions
04/04/2024–04/27/2024 Creating in Abstraction: A Pop-up Project Group Exhibition of 11 Global Contemporary Artists by Morton Fine Art in Bethesda, MD
09/09/2023–10/10/2023 Murmuration
Murmuration, Morton Fine Art, Washington, DC
Image Rights
Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art
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Description
In an ongoing process of investigation and growth, Mann’s practice conjures dilated environments, which beckon like portals to another world. Lush and full, Mann likens her paintings to mazes or gateways, encouraging dreamlike detours and a pleasurable lostness. Eschewing the perspectival sweep of a typical vista, her work creates balanced ecosystems through the aggregation of small elements, material and visual incongruity and layered substrates.
Each of Mann’s paintings begins with staining—diluted paint or ink poured onto paper, in a process that naturally evaporates over several days. The chance marks that remain become the fluid foundation that the artist then embellishes with woodcut collage, botanical detail, decorative forms and harsh, geometric shapes. Cutouts in the shape of weeds native to the Washington, D.C. area, where the artist works, share space with chrysanthemums or plum blossoms sourced from the highly symbolic repertoire of Chinese painting. These precise forms play unexpectedly with the organic foundation of each work and the highly geometric conceits Mann imposes upon them. In the words of the artist, the contrasting strategies “contaminate one another” to create spaces with their own sense of gravity, ecology and space.
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