EMILY MAE SMITH – MEDUSA

Posted on 2015-09-21

In Smith’s meticulously rendered oil paintings, references merge and collide, forming a precise visual vocabulary of scopophilic desire and consumption. A broom—perhaps a reference to the faceless domestic laborer from Disney’s Fantasia, whose sole role was to clean and reproduce-serves as a protagonist; a surrogate for the artist glamorously made-up with lipstick, disguised as a mustachioed man, or monstrously rendered as Medusa herself.

Other tropes slip in and out of the work, providing a framework (or even literal frame) in which to view her narratives of screwball humor, sex, and violence, which become inextricably linked. Sunglasses, binoculars, and mirrors serve as reflective lenses into the paintings, suggesting both the insatiable desire to look and the horror of looking. Flatness gives way to deep astral planes, as space folds and divides within the canvases.

Implicit throughout Smith’s work is a feminist critique grounded in the histories she so deftly cites-from the Pop legacies of the Chicago Imagists and Lichtenstein to Magritte; from Art Nouveau to 1980s Cyberpunk sci-fi. Her paintings are clearly not just about the act of looking, but rather painting looking self-reflexively over its shoulder, drawing on both art history as well as her own work, enticing the viewer with its lurid sexuality, only to be made stiff as you catch its gaze.

Opposite – The Mirror, 2015

Exhibition runs through to October 25th, 2015

Laurel Gitlen
122 Norfolk Street
New York
NY 10002

www.laurelgitlen.com