You are here

Elizabeth Fox: My Darling Clouds

Country:

Categories:

Date: 
Thursday, 30 August 2018 to Saturday, 29 September 2018
Opening: 
Thursday, 30 August 2018 - 5:30pm

Fox’s paintings are siren songs that live in a sphere somewhere between the subconscious and the magical. Her figures are often pale, ghostly, smoke & mirror, more shape than body. The world they move through is one that’s at once mundane—an office, a bus stop, a street with trash cans—and surreal: it’s as if Fox is squeezing the real out of reality, and what’s left is an etherealized version of strange, dream-like beauty.  

Each of her paintings tells us a story. Religious themes like annunciation or resurrection are next to images of beauty and sexuality, power dynamics and vulnerability, Botticelli and Beyonce. There is something puzzling about the narratives though, as if they were unfinished, unresolved, dots in need of connecting, and it’s this enigmatic quality that pulls the viewer in. It’s hard to look away from Fox’s paintings.

The mystery isn’t just a result of missing clues; rather, it’s at the core of Fox’s universe which is center-less, painted from a view from nowhere. The people in her paintings are neither individuals, nor archetypes. They don’t carry messages or proclaim ideologies. And yet, each of Fox’s figures carries an emotionality that is clear and so strong that it’s nearly palpable. Raccoon ladies look at us startled but completely unabashed; a lonely Venus defiantly affirms her beauty in the parking lot of a laundromat; and human Lemurs play in a tree with the agility and innocence of monkeys, and the sensuousness and calculated awareness of dance performers.

Often, Fox says, her paintings begin with a vision of a visually striking image, and the significance of that image only reveals itself after the fact. They stem from a realm in which the visual and the verbal are not separated yet. Fox’s fluency in the language of pop culture is visible in her use of candy-colors and neo-naïve compositions. Yet, her artistic roots go back to artists such as Douglas Bourgeois, the late Chuck Crosby, or Kerry James Marshall. Fox uses smooth surfaces onto which she layers thin coats of color (usually black and white) to create an even denser surface to work off. This underlying opaqueness forms an extraordinary contrast to the ethereal pastel colors and the frequent plays with light and transparency. 

The men in her paintings often appear faceless and stiff; the women, by contrast, exude sensuality through their evocative body language, exaggerated forms, and dreamy eyes. They are distributed across the canvas with a painterly sense of rhythm rather than realism, and set against an abstract background that conveys the dominance of feeling-tone over verisimilitude. Fox’s style is not easily classified but may cautiously be characterized as magical pop-art.

Artist ( Description ): 

Elizabeth Fox was born in Orlando, Florida. She attended the Ringling School of Art in Sarasota before she moved to New Orleans and eventually to Maine. She has exhibited her work in New York City, New Orleans, San Francisco, Miami, Washington DC, Houston, the Netherlands and at the Center for Maine Contemporary Art (CMCA).

Telephone: 
4159563560
Venue ( Address ): 

210 Post St. Suite 205, San Francisco, CA 94108

Dolby Chadwick Gallery , San Francisco

Other events from Dolby Chadwick Gallery

view
Bill Armstrong: Unspoken/Buddhas/Mandalas
07/13/2023 to 09/02/2023
view
Emilio Villalba: Everything is Something
06/01/2023 to 07/08/2023
view
Udo Nöger: There is No Time
05/04/2023 to 05/27/2023
view
Gonzalo Fuenmayor: Bretonian Slip
04/06/2023 to 04/29/2023

Pages

 

Related Shows This Week

view
Mike Olin Paintings
02/16/2024 to 04/14/2024
view
GODDESSES, AMAZONS, and MOTHERS | A Celebration of Female Creativity | Group Exhibition
03/08/2024 to 04/12/2024
view
Gathered in the Stretching Now
03/15/2024 to 04/21/2024
view
Oldies and Goodies
03/07/2024 to 04/08/2024
view
Five Elements: Bill Pangburn's Rivers
03/01/2024 to 03/30/2024
view
What Was Once Familiar: The Vision & Art Project's Tenth Anniversary Benefit Exhibition
03/20/2024 to 04/26/2024
view
In the Belly of the Valley
03/14/2024 to 04/13/2024
view
Aspects of Appearance: Portraits from the Collection in Context
02/25/2024 to 06/30/2024

Pages