Hatch
Feb 20 - Mar 21, 2020
Press release for exhibition Hatch
February 20 – March 21, 2020
Opening Reception: February 20, 6-8 PM
P·P·O·W is pleased to present Hatch, Allison Schulnik’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. In the first presentation since Schulnik gave birth to her daughter Tupelo and moved to the remote mountain area of Sky Valley, California, Hatch incorporates the myriad methods that comprise Schulnik’s practice. Working in paint, sculpture, and animation, Schulnik seamlessly transitions between mediums, imbuing her work with a distinct sensibility that melds theatricality with intense emotional vulnerability. Known for her uncanny approach to traversing the internal and immaterial terrains of nostalgia, childhood memories, and dreams, Schulnik choreographs an honest, complex and contemporary portrait of new motherhood and life seen through the red haze and black silence of the desert.
Journeying into new physical and
spiritual wildernesses with Hatch, Schulnik responds directly to
the present as it unfolds around her, revealing that constant flux between life
and death in the surrounding desert. While it can be dark, coarse, silent, and
still, the desert can also be vibrant, blooming, and full of life. Connecting
this new awareness of nature with the birth of her daughter Tupelo, Schulnik
uses paint like clay to sculpt daily interactions with the natural surroundings
where the fantastic and the real merge. In Tupelo’s Fox, Schulnik
paints from memory a moment when she and a bright-eyed fox, a regular nighttime
visitor to their property, locked eyes during one of her midnight nursing
sessions with Tupelo. The fox, having been spotted, stares elliptically back at
the viewer through the frozen black night. Although shrouded in stillness, with
the rich impasto strokes, Tupelo’s Fox teems with energy and
life.
Over the course of the
exhibition, Schulnik excavates the psychological, spiritual, and literal
terrain of early motherhood. In three very different portraits completed months
apart, Schulnik renders each of, what she calls, “Tupelo’s sides.” Schulnik
describes the side depicted in Tupelo #1 as “fiercely
confident, mesmerizing, and otherworldly.” Painting her daughter on their
living room carpet staring up at her with huge lashes and electric blue eyes,
Schulnik creates an image that can be viewed literally, psychologically, and
spiritually all at the same time. Such works for Schulnik also exist within the
present, the past and the future, ultimately. Occupying this liminal
space, Hatch bridges the real and magical through Schulnik’s
painted environments of motherhood and the desert that expresses to the fullest
both life and death simultaneously.
Allison Schulnik (b. 1978, San
Diego, CA) lives
and works in Sky Valley, CA. Her films have been included in internationally
renowned festivals and museums including MASS MoCA, the Hammer Museum, LACMA,
Annecy International Animated Film Festival and Animafest Zagreb. Her latest
film Moth is the Times Square Arts' January 2020 Midnight
Moment, the world’s largest, longest-running digital art exhibition,
synchronized on electronic billboards throughout Times Square nightly from
11:57pm to midnight. Solo exhibitions of Schulnik’s work have been presented at
the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, CT; Laguna Art Museum, Laguna
Beach, CA; Oklahoma City Museum of Art, OK; Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art,
Overland Park, KS; Mark Moore Gallery, Los Angeles; ZieherSmith, New York, NY;
and Galeria Javier Lopez & Fer Frances, Madrid. Schulnik's work can be
found in numerous museum collections including the Los Angeles County Museum of
Art; Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego; Santa Barbara Art Museum; Museé de
Beaux Arts (Montreal); Laguna Art Museum; The Crocker Art Museum; Wadsworth
Atheneum Museum of Art; and The Albright-Knox Gallery.