Open: Tue-Sat 10am-6pm

48 Walker St, NY 10013, New York, United States
Open: Tue-Sat 10am-6pm


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Alison Elizabeth Taylor: These Days

James Cohan, 48 Walker St, New York

Wed 17 May 2023 to Sat 24 Jun 2023

48 Walker St, NY 10013 Alison Elizabeth Taylor: These Days

Tue-Sat 10am-6pm

Artist: Alison Elizabeth Taylor

James Cohan presents These Days, an exhibition of new work by Alison Elizabeth Taylor, on view at 48 Walker Street. This is Taylor’s seventh solo exhibition with James Cohan.

Artworks

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

17 1/2 × 20 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

15 1/4 × 20 3/4 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

55 × 67 1/4 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

21 1/8 × 23 7/8 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

43 7/8 × 35 1/8 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

47 3/4 × 56 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

14 1/4 × 19 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

75 × 50 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

130 1/4 × 93 3/4 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

51 × 42 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

58 7/8 × 41 5/8 in

Alison Elizabeth Taylor

Marquetry Hybrid

33 × 85 in

Installation Views

Over the past twenty years, Taylor’s highly original approach to marquetry and image making has challenged conventional assumptions about art and the definition of painting. These Days reflects life in a post-pandemic America, where vacations, social gatherings, video game arcades and public gambling have returned. In this new era, these works pose the question “what has changed?” Drawing from life, Taylor’s subjects hail from cities as diverse as Brooklyn, Las Vegas, and Mexico City. Portraits of the artist’s friends and family who departed New York during the pandemic are intermixed with scenes that capture the decadence and spectacle of Southwestern casino culture and the grit of Brooklyn’s stoops and storefronts. Whether depicting moments of late capitalist indulgence in her hometown of Las Vegas or the struggle to survive in her chosen home of New York, Taylor’s sharp social observation and empathy for her subjects come to the fore.

Among the works that take inspiration from the artist’s neighborhood, Try Us evokes the precarious position of many New York mom-and-pop establishments. The work depicts the storefront window of a deli or bodega. Decals advertising an assortment of prepared foods mark the business as the type of familiar fixture seen on neighborhood blocks throughout the city. Despite these recognizable signs, the details of the image reveal a less reliable reality. The lights lining the window are illuminated, but inside the shelves are bare. There are e-bikes outside, seeming to indicate take-out orders in action, but no people are present. These indeterminate signals prompt us to ask: Is it open? Has it survived? Do customers come anymore? Is it new, or was it there all along?

Conversely, travel and commerce are back in full swing in the monumental centerpiece of the exhibition, The Hotel’s Pool. The piece represents guests at a casino pool lounging on beach chairs and playing Blackjack under the eye of a live shark. Scantily, identically clad waitresses and dealers punctuate the space, while a massive aquarium looms in the backdrop, simulating a lush aquatic environment incongruous with the desert landscape that encompasses Las Vegas. Here, Taylor’s trenchant eye is on full display, skewering the synthetic approximation of natural beauty sold to tourists amidst the neglect of the outside environment.

All the works in These Days are made in the artist’s singular, signature medium of “marquetry hybrid,” which combines wood veneer marquetry with materials including painted wood, photographic collage, mica flakes, laser engraved museum board, and oil-painted passages on panel. Continuing to push the boundaries of her chosen materials, Taylor also incorporates sawdust–a waste product of her process–as a textural element in several works in the show.

Similar to the variety of materials Taylor uses to create her work, the artist’s compositional process involves what she refers to as “frankensteining.” Never drawn purely from life, Taylor crafts her pictures using a combination of live sketches, reference photographs taken by the artist herself, and memory. The resulting artworks cut to the emotional depth of her subjects rather than merely reproducing scenes. In every case, Taylor’s perceptive depictions offer defining clues about the people that inhabit her images, creating evocative social portraits whether or not figures populate the picture plane.

© Alison Elizabeth Taylor 2023. Image courtesy of the artist and James Cohan, New York. Photo by Dan Bradica.

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