viky garden | grit

+64 021.453.418:: thelab@fe29.com

528 Months (2021)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
475 x 375 mm
528 Months Acrylic on frayed canvas 47.5cm x 37.5cm, 2021
Grit (2021)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
940 x 600 mm
Grit Acrylic on frayed canvas 94 x 60cm, 2021
I'm Smoking, I'm Drinking, I'm Dancing, I'm Flying (2020)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
910 x 645 mm
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Surge (2021)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
800 x 600 mm
Surge Acrylic on frayed canvas 80 x 60cm, 2021
Surge (study) 2021
Acrylic on frayed canvas
205 x 150 mm
Surge (study) Acrylic on frayed canvas 20.5cm x 15.5cm, 2021
Yeah, I Really Feel Like Sex Now (2020)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
205 x 150 mm
Yeah I Really Feel Like Sex Now Acrylic on frayed canvas 20.5cm x 15.5cm
Red Kimono (2020)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
700 x 500 mm
Red Kimono Acrylic on frayed canvas 70 x 50cm, 2020
Another Matter (2020)
Acrylic on unstretched canvas
470 x 380 mm
Another Matter Acrylic on unstretched canvas 47 x 38cm
Wouldn't it Be Better if Everyone was Pretty
Acrylic on frayed canvas (2021)
470 x 380 mm
Wouldn;t It be Better if Everyone was pretty Acrylic on frayed canvas 47 x 38cm, 2020
Ikon 1 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
95 x 95 mm
Ikon 1 Acrylic on found frame 95 x 95 mm 2021
Ikon 2 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
110 x 75 mm
Ikon 2 Acrylic on found frame 110 x 75 mm 2021
Ikon 3 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
150 x 110 mm
Ikon 3 Acrylic on found frame 150 x 110 mm 2021
Ikon 4 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
115 x 90 mm
Ikon 4 Acrylic on found frame 115 x 90 mm 2021
Ikon 5 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
170 x 120 mm
Ikon 5 Acrylic on found frame 170 x 120 mm 2021
Ikon 6 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
115 x 90 mm
Ikon 6 Acrylic on found frame 115 x 90 mm 2021
Ikon 7 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
170 x 120 mm
Ikon 7 Acrylic on found frame 170 x 120 mm 2021
Ikon 8 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
115 x 90 mm
Ikon 8 Acrylic on found frame 115 x 90 mm 2021
Ikon 9 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
120 x 100 mm
Ikon 9 Acrylic on found frame 120 x 100 mm 2021
Ikon 10 (2021)
Acrylic on found frame
120 x 100 mm
Ikon 10 Acrylic on found frame 120 x 100 mm 2021
Frayed 1 (2020)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
205 x 155 mm
Frayed 1 Acrylic on frayed canvas 205 x 155 2020
Frayed 7 (2020)
Acrylic on frayed canvas
205 x 155 mm
Frayed 7 Acrylic on frayed canvas 205 x 155 2020

From her earliest surviving work, Self Portrait at 16 (1977), Viky Garden has consistently challenged the assumption that portraiture is no longer relevant in contemporary art. Garden’s work, whether it be painting, pinhole photography or sculpture, has from the very beginning, engaged in a self-reflective study of the political sphere of womanhood, in which she uses her own body as a form of language.

Garden’s current exhibition, GRIT, is an eloquent, yet unapologetic exploration of the physical and emotional challenges faced by women as they transition through menopause. The paintings negotiate the halfway point between the awe-inspiring and the often shocking changes that invariably lead to re-evaluations of identity and purpose.

To illustrate this point, Garden uses the wooden ends of redundant paintbrushes and bits of card to push the paint onto the canvas, employing swatches, streaks and splashes of colour to link each work in a journey that is so fluid that her subjects can embody all ages interchangeably. She also makes use of the canvas selvage as part of the work’s narrative, alluding to an approaching brink or limit.

By eschewing traditional wooden stretchers, Garden works against the conventional taut canvas surface, utilising the natural imperfections and inconsistencies of the fabric to emphasise themes of ageing and transition, themes also reflected in the frayed edges of each portrait. Mounted at a slight distance from the wall, these unstretched paintings appear to float or hover – creating their own shadow – an ephemeral effect that speaks to inevitable change through the passing of time.

At a time when large-scale paintings are de rigueur in the art world, Garden has transformed second-hand miniature frames from the 1970s, creating a series of ‘ready-mades’ called Ikons. There is a sense of almost reckless abandon about her technique, pushing the limit of where the paint stops and the frame begins. The result is a collection of tiny enigmatic portraits barely contained within the frames they threaten to breach. These Ikon miniatures reference the Greek Orthodox/Roman Catholic iconography of her Greek/Polish heritage, while larger works in the show place the feminine within more traditional metallic pewter iconographic backgrounds.

GRIT is a poignant reminder of impermanence and change, reflecting and rearticulating the personal and universal aspects of female mutability that has characterised Garden’s output over three decades. Painted during the Covid pandemic, these visceral, deliberately unrefined images speak to the present through a restrained yet direct and unflinching gaze, subtly considering notions of identity, isolation & vulnerability within a perspective that is emotionally & intellectually edifying and wholly feminine.

Click here to see more Viky Garden paintings.