ART ISLANDS: Antiparos-Austin Eddy

Austin Eddy, Oiseau A Plumes 2022, Cast bronze, Ed. 3/3 + 2 AP, 58 x 43 x 16 cm / 22 7/8 x 16 7/8 x 6 1/4 inches, © Austin Eddy, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Eva PresenhuberAustin Eddy’s works are characterized by their skewed perspectives and dimensional flatness, influenced by Cubism of the early twentieth century. Eddy creates a delicate balance between figuration and abstraction. His works are often autobiographical, sharing scenes from his real life experiences. However, Eddy describes, “Yes, the work has always been about things I have seen, felt, or thought. But letting go of that personal narrative part and allowing a larger interpretation to take place is the end goal I guess, Letting go of your self so others can find you”.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: Galerie Eva Presenhuber Archive

Austin Eddy’s paintings quietly circle the subject of death. Temporality and fragility appear as simplified, semi- abstract representations: birds and bird pairs perched on seaside sand bars—symbols of the ephemeral and the transitional, just as the seas’ ebb and flow stand for the coming and going to which our lives and our loves are ultimately also subject. Eddy has called his exhibition “Crossing the Bar”, a title that refers to an 1889 poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson in which the tides become a metaphor for goodbyes and departures. “Twilight and evening bell”— that is the feeling the artist evokes in his images, which at first glance seem so elated. Though always autobiographical in nature, Eddy’s work is not illustrative; it tells no concrete stories. Instead of narrative, the paintings and drawings exude a lyricism that is hard to pin down: calm yet playful, contoured yet open, bright yet muted. His motifs edge so close to abstraction that only their basics stick in our minds, there becoming what we make of them: the bird, the sea, the moon, the sun, the circle, the stripe, the red, the blue, the pink, the purple. Eddy’s paintings celebrate the moment, fully aware of its fleetingness between past and future. Here, amidst the meditative hieroglyphics that form the basis of his paintings, reality only appears to signal its own transience. The simplicity and repetition of Eddy’s bird, land, and sea motifs have a comforting quality: they remind us that our personal experience of mortality is truly a universal one. It is not just the individual who is affected, but all humans; our shared destiny is what connects us. Drawing, painting, and poetry have always been more important to Eddy than prose. Describing thoughts and feelings in images rather than sentences, with allusions rather than illustrations, is his preferred means of expression. “Poetry allowed me to see that things don’t have to be so specific in order to create a sense of beauty or a relationship,” he says. And it is this combination of clarity and suggestion, of silence and precision, that effects a melancholy, which eventually spreads its wings—a bird soaring over the sea, its destination unknown to us. Situated in the art history of Modernism, Eddy’s pictorial language is obviously reminiscent of Cubism, Matisse, and Picasso, but the actual foundation of his painting is the Folk Art that entered domestic life in the middle of the 20th century: simple utilitarian objects such as vases, plates, and cups suddenly exhibited naive motifs reminiscent of Sunday painters, who used archaic forms intuitively rather than conceptually, coming from a deeply human urge to decorate that is as guileless as it is innocent.

Photo: Austin Eddy, Oiseau A Plumes 2022, Cast bronze, Ed. 3/3 + 2 AP, 58 x 43 x 16 cm / 22 7/8 x 16 7/8 x 6 1/4 inches, © Austin Eddy, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Eva Presenhuber

Info: Kastro, Antiparos, Duration: 23/7-28/8/2022, Days & Hours: Fri-Sun 18:00-23:00, www.presenhuber.com

Austin Eddy, Mystical Dusk, 2022, Oil, flashe on canvas, 203 x 101.5 cm / 80 x 40 inches, © Austin Eddy, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Eva Presenhuber
Austin Eddy, Mystical Dusk, 2022, Oil, flashe on canvas, 203 x 101.5 cm / 80 x 40 inches, © Austin Eddy, Courtesy the artist and Galerie Eva Presenhuber