HONG KONG.- Pace presents an exhibition of new paintings and works on paper by Kylie Manning at its Hong Kong gallery.
On view from March 26 to May 9, the show, titled Sea Change, will be Mannings first-ever solo presentation in Hong Kong. Exploring enactments of movement and accumulation as they relate to luminosity and abstraction, the works in the exhibition were all created by the artist in the last year. Sea Change will be accompanied by Mannings first catalogue from Pace Publishing, which will be available for purchase after the shows opening, featuring an essay by art historian and writer Ted Barrow as well as images and full-bleed details of Mannings recent works and projects.
Manningwhose work can be found in the collections of the Baltimore Museum of Art in Maryland, the Columbus Museum of Art in Ohio, the X Museum in Beijing, and the Yuz Museum in Shanghaiis known for her lyrical, atmospheric paintings that blur boundaries. Deeply informed by her experiences living in Alaska and Mexico during her childhood, the artists works situate genderless, anonymous, spectral figures within sweeping landscapes that capture the light and environments specific to those locations. The tangled bodies in her theatrical, stage-like compositions move through dreamlike spaces, recalling the grand 19th-century history paintings of Winslow Homer and Gustave Courbet. Using pigments and painting techniques employed by Old Masters like Johannes Vermeer, Manning applies layers of oils to her canvases, producing a radiant, energetic effect that seems to refract light across the surfaces of her works.
The artists forthcoming exhibition with the gallery has been conceived as part of a tour throughout East Asia that includes presentations at the X Museum in Beijing, Pace in Hong Kong, and an expanded iteration at Space K Seoul, opening in August. The show at Paces gallery in H Queens will feature five large-scale paintings and a group of related drawings. She produced this body of work following her monumental collaboration with choreographer Christopher Wheeldon for the New York City Ballet in 2023. Wheeldon wanted to form a dance within her world, and Manning created large-scale backdrops and costumes for his production From You Within Me. Immersed in rehearsals for the ballet, her works from this period investigate the ways that individual marks can hint at tempo, oscillation, and perspective, cultivating a balance between implication and motion.
In Mannings own words, the volume has been turned up with respect to velocity and vibrancy in this new body of work. Her rapid brushstrokes suggest both a push and a pull, wherein the abstract elements that coalesce into figurations also threaten to obliterate the narrative scenes they compose. Its these precarious, delicate moments of cohesion that Manning is most interested in capturing on canvas, where abstraction is forged from figuration in motion and vice versa. Rife with shapeshifting bodies and forms, her new works seem to exist in a state of constant flux.
Among the paintings in Mannings show at Pace in Hong Kong is Metronome (2023), a composition that reflects her uncanny ability to convey a sense of change and open-endedness in a two-dimensional, static medium. Here, figures morph in and out of different identities and time stamps amid the external chaos of their environment. With Undertow (2023), the most abstract painting in the exhibition, Manning meditates on the simultaneous abundance and violence of the natural world, imbuing her brushstrokes with a tangible mercuriality. Each of the painted works in the Hong Kong presentation invites engagement and exchange with the viewer, who must dance between the artists marks to decipher hidden realms within her canvases.
Mannings works on paper included in the show are gestural studies of motion that shed light on the draftsmanship in her paintings, which she considers drawings rendered in oil. She created this group of sketches in real time as she watched rehearsals for Wheeldons New York City Ballet production last year, and each of these 12 works is named for a dancer in that cast. These drawings are staccatoed mappings of movement; poised between abstraction and figuration, they are odes to a specific time and place of the performing body.