ART CITIES:Zürich-Pictures Punish Words

10376261_10152402999930880_2853416183174899168_nThe technically and iconographically striking paintings of Avery Singerthwart our visual expectations. At an initial glance, they resist a clear classification of painting or printing processes. Hence her works raise the obvious and artistically pressing question of how the digital information that surrounds us can materialize itself – be it as a flat image on paper or more recently in 3-D in plastic, or on and in every other possible material surface.

By Dimitris Lempesis
Photo: Kunsthalle Zürich Archive

 Avery Singer has created a cycle of works specifically for this first institutional solo exhibition. While the analysis of painting has been an ongoing concern for Avery Singer since 2010, she also experiments and explores imaging processes. Her motifs are inspired by the seemingly infinite flood of images on the Internet. She also processes everyday occurrences and realities in her paintings and repeatedly finds inspiration in literature. With the help of the graphic program SketchUp, which is used for 3-D modeling in architecture, Avery Singer constructs complex spatial compositions filled with abstracted figures and objects. In the course of this process, the motifs are translated into geometric forms and reduced to simple elements: hair becomes zigzag lines, eyebrows straighten, arms turn into blocks and the female bosom becomes an asymmetrical polygonal outgrowth of the body. Singer projects these computer-generated sketches onto a canvas or panel, separating the forms from each other using masking tape and creating surfaces on the canvas in a grey palette with airbrush. Through their rejection of color, these works follow the tradition of Grisaille, a style of painting that featured predominantly in medieval panel painting and the Renaissance, and was frequently used for the translation of sculptures into painting.

Info: Kunsthalle Zürich, Limmatstrasse 270, Zürich, Duration: 21/11/14-25/1/15, Days & Hours: Tue, Wed, Fri:11:00-18:00, The: 11:00-20:00, Sat: 10:00-17:00, www.kunsthallezurich.ch