gleaming
h.
New paintings by Miriam Jarrs
10 September
- 17 October 2009
View
the exhibition online
Sesame Gallery is proud to present ‘gleaming
h’, the first solo exhibition by Hamburg-based
painter Miriam Jarrs.
Miriam’s paintings are poetic, magical, sinister
and sublime. They depict a world of dream-like landscapes
and forests that host a cast of folkloric symbols and
characters, each with their own stories that progress
across the different paintings. Naïve, hallucinogenic
and individually enchanting, as a group the paintings
work like an autobiographical epic, a labyrinth of micro-narratives
for the viewer to explore.
The other-worldliness of
Miriam’s paintings is
subtle, indebted to surrealism but with a lighter, slighter
touch. Like the first steps of a fairy tale, it is by
following the trail of understated visual details that
the strange, unsettling quality of this Garden of Eden
becomes apparent. Dark is inverted to light; light itself
becomes concentrated into orbs that float like speckles
of snow, or streams of stars, beyond and between the
trees; horizons disintegrate, proportions distort; a
visible wind blows the narratives from one painting to
another. Throughout, the landscapes are charged with
a silent intensity, that half-light and heavy weather
of the moment before the storm breaks.
Within this dreamscape, different
characters take shape and develop. Particular to this
body of work is the horse
of lights that first appears on the edge of a field of
reeds, on the cusp of a looming storm, resurging later
on the edge of a swamp in ‘black electric’,
lurking in the background like a recurrence in a dream.
Other symbols follow their own paths. Cyclamen flowers
blow from painting to painting like an echo of sexual
excitement; a white cord binds characters to nature,
and the paintings to each other; lakes swollen with the
milk of human kindness glow against the night sky. All
combine to create an autobiographical landscape where
the artist’s experiences are transformed and sublimated
into a personal myth and folklore.
As such, while Miriam’s work and her visual language
may sit within the context of new romantic painters such
as Peter Doig or Neo Rauch, her agenda is quite different.
Rather than exploring symbolism from a temporal perspective
(such as the politicism prevalent in much German painting
or re-interpreting the moment of the photograph), Miriam
uses her paintings to re-examine the function of metaphor
in story-telling, and how this in turn can be used to
digest personal experiences whilst simultaneously articulate
common basics and values – relationships to nature,
to each other, and to our own experiences and memories.
This sincere, animistic approach to painting goes to
the very heart of visual story-telling, and marks Miriam’s
work out as a truly exciting exploration of painting’s
more fantastic possibilities.
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"gleaming h."
Oil on linen, 2009
175cm x 200cm

"black breeze"
Oil on linen, 2009
100cm x 100cm

“ lisbon”
Oil on linen, 2009
60cm x 80cm
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