American Genre: Contemporary Painting Exhibition and Symposium

American Genre: Contemporary Painting at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the Maine College of Art in Portland, ME is a survey of contemporary art exploring the role of three historical painting genres as a framework of knowledge for understanding and contextualizing contemporary painting practices.
When I attended the show’s opening back in July, I felt a tremendous sense of humility and gratitude to see my painting, Swimmer (2017), hanging alongside the work of some of my favorite painters working today.

a medley of candid images from the American Genre opening at the Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA) in Portland, Maine
American Genre: Contemporary Painting at the Institute of Contemporary Art in Portland, ME Exhibition concludes with a day-long symposium and panel discussion on September 15, 2017

On Friday, September 15th the Institute will host a daylong symposium and panel discussion featuring a handful of participating artists and writers, along with the critic Barry Schwabsky and the show’s curator, Michelle Grabner.

For further information on the show, click here: https://www.meca.edu/event/american-genre-contemporary-painting-exhibition/ For information about the symposium on September 15, click here: https://www.meca.edu/event/ica-meca-american-genre-painting-symposium/


Statement for “American Genre: Contemporary Painting” exhibition (regarding Swimmer, 2017):

“Every time I visit New York, I try to visit a particular Cézanne painting in the permanent collection at MoMA.

In the Cézanne, a youthful male bather carefully steps forward with his left foot, hands resting on hips, in a dreamlike overcast landscape by the sea. The picture is compelling because it seems to occupy several positions at once — strength, fragility, confidence, vulnerability, presence and preoccupation — in both the painter and his subject.

The source image for Swimmer was a found image of the American Olympian athlete Kathleen Gieneveve “Katie” Ledecky. I think I was drawn to the picture because I could sense a similar countenance in the subject to that of the Cézanne, which I have tried to capture here in my own way.”

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