LONDON.- Taymour Grahne Projects is presenting Inventing Eden, an online solo exhibition by Massachusetts-based artist Hilary Doyle.
Archaeological, mythological and historical evidence all reveal that the female religion, far from naturally fading away, was the victim of centuries of continual persecution and suppression by the advocates of the newer religions which held male deities as supreme. And from these new religions came the creation myth of Adam and Eve and the tale of the loss of Paradise. --Merlin Stone, When God Was a Woman (1978)
This show introduces a new series of paintings depicting a contemporary Garden of Eden: the public park. Parks can be utopian in the ways they connect people with nature and others in urban spaces. Conversely, parks can harbor a sense of artificiality or eeriness, especially at night. Focusing on the conditions in which people live helps us examine the rituals, psychology and emotions of daily life. The setting of public urban parks also becomes a stage for questioning mythologies and how they have shaped our world. Several of the works in the show reinterpret historical paintings of silenced women, depicted in artworks of the past. For example, the Greek Goddess Daphne runs from Apollos grasp in several works or the Venus of Willendorf basks skinnydipping in primordial water.
Three main forms of research inspire each painting: observations, literature, and collecting fruit patterns. The work starts with mundane moments observed, often sketched or noted on daily stroller walks with the artists toddler in public parks. These memories are combined with historical painting research to make sketches. Monotypes and loose watercolors are then made from these sketches to inform paintings. Doyles daily watercolor practice, and her monotypes have influenced a new minimal expressiveness in these small paintings. Brush strokes balance between abstraction, image and emotional gesture in each mark. The speed and dissolving bodies in flux represent the fluidity and fleeting intensity of everyday life.
Books that influenced these paintings include: Herland, a perfect feminist world created by Charlotte Perkins Gillman, The Heroin with 1001 Faces by Maria Tatar, Societies of Peace: Matriarchies Past, Present, and Future, stories collected by Heidi Goettner-Abendroth, and Braiding Sweetgrass by Robin Wall Kimerer. Another important reference point is When God Was a Woman by archaeologist Merlin Stone. The author compiles countless examples in ancient, neolithic and prehistoric art that all point to a time, not that long ago, when women were not just equal to men but respected members of society and celebrated and worshiped as goddesses. Her book shows how art, religion and mythology were all used as tools to remove womens power in society and that this is a fairly recent 2,000 year old phenomenon.
These paintings utilize humor and narratives of women and mothers to question the curse of oppression that was first placed on women by the artwork of the past and still permeates into society today. Fruit patterns, often painted on womens clothing hold many symbols: hope for a fresh start in the pandemic, the oppressive forbidden fruit myth, or how women, like fruit or flowers, are all too often underestimated, as simply beautiful.
Hilary Doyle's next physical show at Taymour Grahne Projects will take place in June 2022. Hilary Doyle is an artist, teacher and curator from Worcester, MA. Her work includes painting, drawing, printmaking and sculpture about gender class and psychology. She has recently exhibited at spaces such as Hesse Flatow (NYC), Gallery Func (Shanghai), Public Swim (NYC), and Monya Rowe Gallery (NYC). She has had solo shows at One River School (NJ), The Active Space (NYC) and Brown University (RI). Her works are included in the Beth Rudin DeWoody Collection and have received press coverage in Hyperallergic, Bushwick Daily, and New American Paintings Blog. Doyle is part time faculty at Rhode Island School of Design and co-founded NYC Crit Club with co-director Catherine Haggarty. She is also a gallery co-director at Transmitter Gallery. She received an MFA from Rhode Island School of Design and a BFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design. Doyle currently lives and works in Worcester, MA.