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Cecily Brown

June 8–July 29, 2011
Davies Street, London

Cecily Brown Installation ViewPhotography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown

Installation View
Photography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown Installation ViewPhotography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown

Installation View
Photography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown Installation ViewPhotography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown

Installation View
Photography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown Installation ViewPhotography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown

Installation View
Photography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown Installation ViewPhotography by Mike Bruce

Cecily Brown

Installation View
Photography by Mike Bruce

Installation video Play Button

Installation video

Works Exhibited

Cecily Brown, Untitled, 2009 Oil on linen, 17 × 12 ½ inches (43.2 × 31.8 cm)

Cecily Brown, Untitled, 2009

Oil on linen, 17 × 12 ½ inches (43.2 × 31.8 cm)

About

Gagosian Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of paintings and works on paper by Cecily Brown.

Drawing broad inspiration from many forbears, from Hieronymus Bosch, Pieter Breughel the Elder, and James Ensor to the abstractions of Arshile Gorky and Philip Guston, Brown brings to the conventions of a traditionally male-dominated history an assertive and, at times, ribald femininity. Revisiting scenes from popular culture as well as Old Master imagery, she creates a personal vision that transcends classical notions of genre and narrative.

This series of intimately scaled works was primarily inspired by Michelangelo’s earliest attributed painting, The Torment [or Temptation] of St Anthony, as well as following on from Brown’s own studies after Struwwelpeter’s The Story of Fidgety Phil from 2006 to the present. These small and intricate paintings contain the same expressionist intensity and formal complexity common to many of her larger works. Provocative tension is generated between formal properties and sublimated figural content in dense compositions where tangles of flesh dissolve into inchoate sensuousness.

For the first time, Brown is showing gouaches and watercolours together with her paintings, in which she communicates tactile immediacy in an almost cartoon-like manner. They pulse with vitality, their jostling, tumbling forms and clear, vivid palette containing furiously compressed energies.

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