NEW YORK, NY.- Karma presents Belgian painter Carole Vanderlindens debut exhibition in New York, open from November 1December 21, 2024, at 188 East 2nd Street.
Carole Vanderlindens painting practice is expansive, encompassing what she has called a mix of genres to achieve a coming together of things that shouldnt mix. For thirty years, she has worked across collage, drawing, and oils, exploring the syntax of painting through association, intuition, and the act of making itself, as evinced by the oils on view here, made over the course of the last decade. Her titles, which span and sometimes combine numerous languages, point to her imbrication in both semantic and art historical multitudes.
With innumerable motifs and methods on the table, the fundamental condition of paintingchoicecomes to the fore. Deciding on subject and form, she is guided by her mind as much as her hand. As she explains: The hand is an extension of our thoughts, like an instrument physically connected to the painting. Vanderlindens works do not generate stable meanings, legibility, or narrative; rather, they remain autonomous, commenting primarily on the act of putting brush to canvas. Each painting represents, for the artist, a singular, playful way of grappling with the world around her. Rather than objective statements, they are subjective expressions, generated from memories, images, and snatches of detail, unafraid of humor and never wedded to a single approach.
Although Purple house (2023), Lescalier bleu (2023), and Un tour en ville (2023) each depict domestic architectures, what unites them more than the subject matter is Vanderlindens embrace of a freedom in painting that allows for experimentation and exploration above all. Melanie Deboutte has written that, in Vanderlindens practice, each element, be it a brushstroke or accidental mark, relates to the rest in complete autonomy and equality, and in Nature morte (2019), this horizontal relationality manifests metaphorically in her depiction of a tabletop strewn with ambiguous forms, all coexisting on the same plane. Thinking and working slowly, she nondogmatically investigates ways of representing the world in all of its variety.
In Paysage tropical (2014), dark, blueish-green paint drips from a verdant array of plant life outlined in the same color, serendipity existing alongside intentionevidence of the artists longstanding responsiveness to both chance and materiality. The passage of time is visible on the surface of this painting, gravity slowed down and arrested. The impasto brushwork in Papillon verde (2024) contrasts with the thick black outline delineating a simplified, smiling face topped with a yellow, mustache-shaped toupé. Capharnaüm (2024), its title a French word indicating a disorderly accumulation of objects, knits monstrous visages into a tapestry of colorful swatches. Couple aguerri (2024), a figurative but not naturalistic work built from overlapping and interlocking shapes, imbues the exaggerated geometry of the costumed dancers in Bauhaus choreographer Oskar Schlemmers Triadic Ballet (1922) with a faux-naïve lightheartedness. For Vanderlinden, who ardently believes in the power of her medium, Painting does not deceive, but rather, has the gentle power to unite.