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Saturday, November 8, 2025 |
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| Karma Gallery explores the poetry of domestic space in 'The View From Inside' |
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Yvonne Jacquette, Yellow Chair, 1966. Acrylic on Masonite, 32 × 24 in.
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NEW YORK, NY.- The artists in The View From Inside unsentimentally represent the interior spaces that structure our daily life. Featuring works by Henni Alftan, Lois Dodd, Jane Freilicher, Josephine Halvorson, Yvonne Jacquette, Catherine Murphy, and Sylvia Plimack Mangold, the exhibition charts a genealogy of approaches to representation that engage with minimalism while remaining wedded to the observed world. These artists explore relative degrees of trompe loeil and stylized flatness, the role of the crop in setting the bounds of a composition, and perspectives that both disorient and reorient. Architectural thresholdswindows, doors, and so onat turns offer and thwart passage; together, these paintings offer a plethora of views from inside.
Yvonne Jacquettes interiors of the 1960s capture unexpected angles on the domestic. The tension between their cool, detached tone and the intimacy of their perspective puts the spectator in the artists shoes while refusing to impose a particular affect. The closely cropped view in Door Opening (1969) distills the geometric essence of its titular subject. Aligned perfectly with the side of the canvas, molding introduces an abyss of repeated right angles, the structuring condition of paintings architecture. Like Jacquette, Sylvia Plimack Mangold used the techniques of realism to portray the minimalism present in the everyday. In the latters 196676 series portraying her apartments parquet floor, Plimack Mangold pays nearly photorealistic attention to every whorl and gnarl in the wood slats. For the artist, however, these painstaking renderings are not about fooling the eye, but about questioning the nature of painting and, thereby, levels of reality. In First Study (1973), a mirror reflects the parquet at an oblique angle but omits Plimack Mangold, who has painted herself out of the composition.
Lois Dodd and Jane Freilichers interiors, while less austere and more gestural than those of Plimack Mangold and Jacquette, also use the constraints of the private space of the home as structuring devices. Their relationships were not only formal but also personal: Dodd and Jacquette connected through Maines artistic community, while Plimack Mangold, Jacquette, and Freilicher met in New Yorks downtown scene, becoming close friends and significant influences on one anothers practices. Writing about Freilichers interior landscapes in paintings like Window on the West Village (1999) and Soap Opera I (1986), Nathan Kernan notes how the outside is explicitly brought in, and the inside is taken out. The table in the foreground of Still LifeRooftops (1970) extends to the edge of the window frame, creating one continuous plane with the roofing outside, a symbolic passageway between containment and freedom. Painting from her home instead of in a separate studio, Dodd similarly merges the boundary between inside and outside through tight framing and clever reflection, as in Mirror + Window (1988). In The Broken Door, Blaiseys Place (1999), boundaries between interior and exterior are caught in the middle of their mutual dissolution. Pieces of wood weave over and under each other around a central void, a portal to what lies just beyond.
Dodds broken door is echoed in Josephine Halvorsons six-foot-tall Breaking Door (2014), its subject approaching life-size. With her trompe loeils of a latched window framing a monochromatic night sky, Halvorson, like Jacquette, suggests that the visible world already contains the seeds of abstraction. Catherine Murphy offers a vision realer than reality; in Nochlins words, no photograph would care so much, could be as ostentatiously lavish in its documentation as Wallpapered Corner (2000), in which carefully observed seams in the decorative, hunting-themed wall covering reveal the cracks in representation. Cellar Light (1985), presents a glimpse of the first floor of a house from an oblique angle that feels at once impossibly broad and intuitively true. Henni Alftans paintings, on the other hand, stylize quotidian moments into broad, flat panes of color: a glass of milk casting a shadow and an empty picture frame become chances to translate transparency and geometry. Alftans Neighbours (2025) doubles down on the question of framing so central to The View From Inside, showing the sightline from one home into another uncannily similar, equally unoccupied residence. Honing in on the elements of interior architecture that confine by design, the artists here present expanded views that illuminate not only boundaries but also the possibility of transcending them.
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