Exhibition/event has ended.
[Image: Anna Weyant Lily, 2021 Oil on canvas 48 x 60 x 1 inches (121.9 x 152.4 x 2.5 centimeters)   Anna Weyant, Courtesy of the artist and Blum & Poe, Los Angeles/New York/Tokyo Photo: Genevieve Hanson]

Anna Weyant "Splinter"

Blum
FinishedReservation Required

Artists

Anna Weyant
This exhibition is the gallery’s second solo exhibition featuring New York-based artist Anna Weyant.

This new body of work sees Weyant delving deeper into pop history- borrowing from the visual dialectic of Lifetime movies and ‘90s celebrity culture. Struck by the way that made-for-television movies seem to simultaneously vilify, sexualize, and stereotype women, the artist emulates these films by deploying the genre’s tendency to reveal the secrets of a hyperbolic version of American suburbia. This presentation of five works on paper and four paintings tells the story of a lavish party gone awry. In this darkly fantastical universe, golden ribbons tumble in from outside the bounds of each vignette to control or taunt the subject within, and delicate flower arrangements are wilted or maimed, all while Girl Crying at a Party (2021) looks on.

Monster (2021) and Drawing for Monster (2021) take their names from a line in Eminem’s 2002 hit song “Without Me” wherein the artist says, “I’ve created a monster, ‘cause nobody wants to see Marshall no more, They want Shady, I’m chopped liver.” The painting and its study depict bulbous, flesh-like balloons and stuffed sausage casings hanging from glinting ribbons. One wonders if these suspended bits of meat are a reference to the “chopped liver” from the song- thus a self-portrait or painterly indulgence- or if they are the “monster” itself, a public-facing and self-aware version of the artist’s work. While this question is left unanswered, what is made certain is that Splinter’s eerie party decorations evoke the bizarre violence of the Lifetime original movies it was inspired by.

Weyant’s flowers are flawed, beautiful objects; they are drooping and incomplete. In Lily (2021) and Drawing for Lily (2021), the white flowers, traditionally a symbol of purity and fertility, have their stamens cut off so as not to stain the petals. In Glory Days (2021) and Drawing for Glory Days (2021) four roses wilt in their vase while one is held up by the same golden ribbon that dangled the sausage links in Monster. These ribbons allow Weyant to manipulate her subjects, exposing the contradictions within her fictitious universe and the surreal suburbia on which it is based.

Inspired by a widely circulated image of American model Anna Nicole Smith, Girl Crying at a Party exemplifies what Splinter conveys to the viewer- Weyant’s particular method of pursuing the uncanny. To present the trope of a public figure crying- especially a woman who was assumed to uphold a very specific set of Western beauty standards- is to put forth a contradiction that reveals the weight of expectation and the repercussions that result when reality breaks with (or splinters off from) what has been planned. Weyant recognizes and explores the public’s fixation with the uncanny nature of actuality in opposition to expectation, playing with this juxtaposition throughout the exhibition.

Schedule

Jan 29 (Sat) 2022-Mar 12 (Sat) 2022 

Reservation Required

Opening Hours Information

Hours
12:00-18:00
Closed
Monday, Sunday, Holidays
FeeFree
Websitehttps://blumandpoe.com/exhibitions/anna_weyant
VenueBlum
https://blum-gallery.com/
Location5F Harajuku Jingu-no-mori, 1-14-34 Jingumae, Shibuya-ku
, Tokyo 150-0001
Access1 minute walk from the Takeshita exit of Harajuku Station on the JR Yamanote line, 2 minute walk from exit 2 at Meiji-jingumae Station on the Chiyoda and Fukutoshin lines.
Phone03-3475-1631 
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