NEW YORK, NY.- Alexander Berggruen is presenting Madeline Peckenpaugh: Farsight. This exhibition opened Wednesday, April 12, 2023.
Maybe its her Midwest upbringing, the distinct flora and fauna that grow in the marshes and prairies of Wisconsin. Maybe its moving from that environment into urban landscapes in her adult life. Maybe its being raised by two painters, who to this day remain the artists she holds in highest regard. Or maybe its her aptitude for observation of things that others dont see, with her ability to pick up on compositions that naturally occur within the backdrop of daily life.
In Farsight, Madeline Peckenpaughs visual languagea likely culmination of all influences previously mentionedoffers a new way through the unending questions surrounding the act of painting.
With Peckenpaughs work, what you see is most often not what you get. Hers is a process-oriented practice full of coincidences. Something might be added to the surface only to be stripped away from it, yet still considered vital in its contribution to the end result. The life cycle of a painting in Peckenpaughs studio welcomes in chance moments that merge texture, color, and the resulting illusion. The life cycle of this particular body of work began in the summertime and concludes in the spring. Each painting experienced its own transformation whether in the physical world or in Peckenpaughs internal space marked by the changing of seasons. At this present moment of natures rebirth, the works are seen for the first time like an offering to begin anew.
There is a human tendency to want to assign familiarity to that which is new for us. In the case of Peckenpaughs work, which emulates novelty into the current visual landscape, there might be a rush to categorize her work as leaning into a certain school of painting. If youve arrived at any such conclusion, think again. Like windows looking into unknown realms, Peckenpaughs paintings question time, place, and a humans vantage point within it all ideas that when transcribed through her paint, preclude classification. A sense of wonder, generated from viewing the world from not so straightforward perspectives, becomes imbued within the fibers of each painting.
Peckenpaugh is constantly in question of her surroundings, bending the pre-disposed ideas of the places she has come to know over the years. She bravely embraces moments, in her life and in her studio, that shift or replace that which has become recognizable, and therefore comfortable, into new, sometimes daunting, terrain.
This active way of viewing translates directly onto her canvas. Peckenpaughs bank of reference images, a sacred vault she has been building upon for years, is not full of objectively beautiful scenes that elude obvious inspiration. She finds splendor in chance compositions she sees on the New York City sidewalks, in a litter-strewn alleyway, or in the frank contrast of nature and machine that permeates our modern world.
Through Farsight, Peckenpaugh reflects the innate balance of the universe within her painterly sphere. In the artists words, the painting, gets exactly what it needs. Nothing more and nothing less. Peckenpaughs keen awareness of this belief system shines through as we are greeted with work that shows the artists presence at every step of the way.