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Cecily Brown

September 6–October 12, 2013
Beverly Hills

Installation view, photo by Josh White

Installation view, photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Installation view Photo by Josh White

Works Exhibited

Cecily Brown, Be Nice to the Big Blue Sea, 2013 Oil on linen, 109 × 171 inches (276.9 × 434.3 cm)Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Be Nice to the Big Blue Sea, 2013

Oil on linen, 109 × 171 inches (276.9 × 434.3 cm)
Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Luck Just Kissed You Hello, 2013 Oil on linen, 67 × 65 inches (170.2 × 165.1 cm)Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Luck Just Kissed You Hello, 2013

Oil on linen, 67 × 65 inches (170.2 × 165.1 cm)
Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Untitled, 2013 Oil on linen, 77 × 165 inches (195.6 × 419.1 cm)Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Untitled, 2013

Oil on linen, 77 × 165 inches (195.6 × 419.1 cm)
Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Untitled (The Beautiful and the Damned), 2013 Oil on linen, 109 × 171 inches (276.9 × 434.3 cm)Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Untitled (The Beautiful and the Damned), 2013

Oil on linen, 109 × 171 inches (276.9 × 434.3 cm)
Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Untitled, 2013 Oil on linen, 77 × 97 inches (195.6 × 246.4 cm)Photo by Robert McKeever

Cecily Brown, Untitled, 2013

Oil on linen, 77 × 97 inches (195.6 × 246.4 cm)
Photo by Robert McKeever

About

Gagosian Beverly Hills is pleased to announce a major exhibition of recent paintings by Cecily Brown, her first show in Los Angeles in ten years, following an exhibition of related work in New York earlier this year.

In this exhibition Brown continues to explore the tradition of the nude ensemble in painting. In her visible grapple with formal concerns, she crowds each canvas with stylistically diverse anonymous figures—some loosely suggested, others identifiably expressive—who fulfill her explicit aim of conveying figurative imagery in a just-elusive shorthand, resulting in encounters with subjects glimpsed, rather than fully seen. The relative clarity of some faces encourages the viewer to perceptually “finish” other, less defined figures, to resolve the gestural abbreviations. Each painting reveals an active present state, unfolding in a succession of deliberately fluid unresolved moments over time.

Brown draws equivocally from the history of painting as well as pop culture. By freeing her subjects and inspirations from their original contexts, she subverts the role of narrative in the construction of genre, and points to the slippage inherent in quoting from source. Fragmented figures and faces, reduced to complexions or expressions, dissolve into kaleidoscopic concentrations of grey, purple, and sienna with a sudden accent of electric teal or orange. Eyelashes, teeth, hair, the curve of a breast or a shoulder blade may stand out from contrasting brushwork, or separate into momentary tonal distillations amidst the compositional flux.

Building upon the tenebrous compositions of her recent New York exhibition, Brown introduces a bright palette and prominent male figures, making visible sexual and psychological tensions that culminate in The Quarrel II (2013). Engaging with the paintings of Edgar Degas, she draws on the alienated subjects and color-rich settings of La Coiffure (c.1896) and Young Spartans Exercising (c. 1860). In the monumental Be Nice to the Big Blue Sea (2012), Young Spartans Exercising is recast as a pastoral whirl of grassy greens and flesh tones. Brimming with the intensity of human presence, these paintings play out Brown's persistent fascination with the tension between bold painterly gesture and figurative clarity.

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