William Shearburn Gallery is pleased to announce Likeness, a group exhibition. The
exhibition will open with a reception on March 10 and will remain on view through April 21.
The exhibition will feature works by Milton Avery, Chuck Close, George Condo, Richard
Diebenkorn, Mark Flood, Lucien Freud, Chantal Joffe, Alex Katz, KAWS, Elaine de
Kooning, Robert Longo, Henri Matisse, John Sonsini, Andy Warhol and Cayce Zavaglia.
Though these works encompass an array of formal approaches in painting, drawing and
printmaking, they share in that they can each, with varying degrees of literality, be seen as a
portrait.
A central aspiration of portraiture is to capture a subject’s essence: its intrinsic nature or
indispensable quality, its je ne sais quois. The language of this endeavor—to capture an
essence—immediately evokes a charged power dynamic between artist, subject and, indeed,
viewer. There is an aspect of taking over, being absorbed, then re-embodied. Portraiture has
its roots in the overtly political, originally reserved as a tool to immortalize the wealthy
political elite. The politics of portraiture today are far more variegated, drawing lines
between the deeply personal, mass-produced, gestural and appropriated. From Velasquez and
Rembrandt to Katz and Condo, the history of portraiture is rich with reinterpretations and
reactions to or against, as artists have migrated between abstraction and representation,
spirituality and cynicism. A portrait might embody and relay a certain narrative about the
sitter, or in Peyton’s case, the relationship between artist and sitter. A portrait might be
darkly psychological, as with Freud’s fraught figures; expressively off-kilter, as with Chantal
Joffe’s disproportionate, listless subjects, or it might flatten and modularize a figure into
something readily consumable, as with Lichtenstein. Whatever the approach, this diverse
group of artists undertakes an expansive survey of what a portrait can be.