exhibition text

John Finneran’s paintings have always been personal and abstract, whether or not they also had figures in them. In previous bodies of work, shapes and forms had meanings: the circle was the sun or the moon, the triangle was female anatomy or a pyramid or a mountain, the eyes became a bellybutton, the rectangle an urban structure. The mood was in the colours. Finneran drew a distinction between the personal and the biographical, pivoting his interest towards the emotions and feelings in the paintings, rather than the personal experience behind them. But in current times, he says it feels right to identify ones position.

For the Brussels show, Finneran has gathered new paintings that contemplate the time he has spent traveling in the Southwest since his relocation from New York to LA four years ago. Where there was the Lower East Side, the ocean in South Jersey and the walk over the Williamsburg Bridge from Brooklyn to Manhattan, now there is New Mexico, Tucson, Big Bend National Park, the Rio Grande in Texas, the drive back to LA along the border – these are Finneran’s new subjects. Landscapes become places, where personal thoughts swirl and dance at the back of the mind and are subsequently transferred to canvas. The abstraction is more “abstract”. The mood, still, is in the colours. The Green is new for Finneran, but is never about landscape: instead the new colour joins the Blacks and Pinks, with their Purple tones, to express feelings. It is not a total rupture from before, but certainly a new beginning.

The London show finds Finneran searching for his own presence in the paintings, looking for the parts of himself that are hidden. Finneran has long been suspicious of biography, the narrowing focus of the personal, in painting. But here the question turns around: he asks himself how biography is ever separated from painting? What lurks in the idea that an artist can control their own presence in their work? What are you leaving un-confronted, what do you hide from yourself if you try? Here there is a figure, holding up a blanket or shadow in a protective gesture. There are black walls of cracked bricks. The gallery windows are darkened, the overall view is obstructed. The viewer gets to discover the paintings only from different perspectives, like a kind of a journey between layers. A ghostly Silver appears instead of the Green. A black painting is a mirror with no reflection in it. Undulating sinister tracks are an Edvard Munch painting seen in a book laying on a table, from the artist’s memory. Perhaps, the subject is just the self, the hidden self and the acknowledged self, the figure behind the blanket. It is private here.

In loving memory of our dear friend Fred Dewey
Los Angeles Times Obituary

Fred Dewey
Resistance Poster
2014

LA Homicide
2010
photographs with hand written text, neon, video

LA Homicide
2010
photographs with hand written text, neon, video

LA Homicide: The Jungle
2010
pigment ink-jet print, ink
190 x 150 cm
(detail)

LA Homicide: Robert Lomell
2010
cibachrome
42 x 34 cm

LA Homicide
2010
photographs with hand written text, neon, video

Video Still:
Ellen de Bruijne Projects, Amsterdam, NL 10.10.2010

La Homicide: Watts Riots; Rodney King Verdict, Riots;
LAPD Rampart Scandal; Homicide Report Blog

2010
pigment ink-jet print, indian ink
190 x 107 cm

La Homicide: Watts Riots; Rodney King Verdict, Riots;
LAPD Rampart Scandal; Homicide Report Blog

2010
pigment ink-jet print, indian ink
190 x 107 cm
(detail)

LA Homicide: Boyle Heights I,
A Piece of the Continent, A Part of the Main

2010
cibachrome
80 x 67.5 cm

LA Homicide
2010
photographs with hand written text, neon, video

LA Homicide: South-Central II
2010
cibachrome
170 x 72 cm

LA Homicide: Liquor Store Gods
2010
neon 170 cm, type c-print
78.5 x 75 cm

LA Homicide: Liquor Store Gods
2010
neon 170 cm, type c-print
78.5 x 75 cm
(detail)

LA Homicide
2010
photographs with hand written text, neon, video

LA Homicide: John Doe #51
2010
laser print, acrylic paint
30.5 x 40.5 cm

LA Homicide
2010
photographs with hand written text, neon, video

LA Homicide:
Reynaud Cage Jr., 48 and Yancy Cage, 39; April 3, 2010

2010
cibachrome, ink
41.5 x 34 cm

LA Homicide:
Reynaud Cage Jr., 48 and Yancy Cage, 39; April 3, 2010

2010
cibachrome, ink
41.5 x 34 cm
(detail)

La Homicide:
Pacific Coast Highway / Graffiti / Graffiti Remover I

2010
cibachrome
73 x 60 cm

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness
2012 – 2015
wallpainting, photographs with hand written text, video, drawings, archive material

The Frank Church River of no Return Wilderness:
Vote Corruption Out! | Horses

2021
type c print
40 x 40 cm

 

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness
2012 – 2015
wall painting, photographs, video, performance, drawings, archive material
(Installation detail)

 

Hand-written text on photograph
(bottom left corner of white border):

hearings
arguments
polemics
after – the – fact
within the facts, surrounded by them
– the forest is so large they don’t
put out the fires, just let them
burn
no memorial, just this one
(best that I could do)
origin of a question
destination of an answer
understanding, in public, as action

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness
2012 – 2015
wall painting, photographs, video, performance, drawings, archive material
(Installation detail)

 

Hand-written text on photograph
(bottom right of white border):

The Church-Reports were like a rumor
– around the Panthers,
or Chile, MLK, darkness.

A copy impossible to find
(until the internet)
the author was/is forgotten, except
probably to the 900.000 people
who wanted him for President,
who voted for the promise “means are as important, as ends”

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness
2012 – 2015
(Video still)

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness
2012 – 2015
(Video still)

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness
2012 – 2015
wallpainting, photographs with hand written text, video, drawings, archive material

Archive material
Courtesy of the Frank Church Papers,
Boise State University,
Special Collections Department Idaho, US

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness:
Like in a Break Up
(Performance Notation – February 27, 2015, Arratia Beer)

2015
ink on paper
42 x 56 cm

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness:
(Performance Notation – February 27, 2015, Arratia Beer)

2015
ink on paper
42 x 56 cm

The Frank Church – River of No Return Wilderness:
Public by Definition
(Performance Notation – February 27, 2015, Arratia Beer)

2015
ink on paper
42 x 56 cm

Publications and materials from Jeremiah Day’s collaborators inc:
Fred Dewey
Simone Forti
Alisa Margolis
Can Altay
Aaron Hughes

Publications and materials from Jeremiah Day’s collaborators inc:
Fred Dewey
Simone Forti
Alisa Margolis
Can Altay
Aaron Hughes

Does posterity need community or vice versa?
(Lailye Weidman at Contact Quartley Office)
2020
pigment print with hand-written text.
50 x 60 cm
(detail)

Does posterity need community or vice versa?
Ornette Coleman note, Contact Quarterly archive

2020
pigment prints with and written text
50 x 60 cm

Publications and materials from Jeremiah Day’s collaborators inc:
Fred Dewey
Simone Forti
Alisa Margolis
Can Altay
Aaron Hughes

Does posterity need community or vice versa?
Contact Improv class / SNDO archive

2020
pigment prints with and written text
50 x 60 cm

Does posterity need community or vice versa?
And wheelchairs, and babies / Contact Quartley
archive
2020
pigment prints with and written text
50 x 60 cm

Does posterity need community or vice versa?
Seascape / SNDO archive

2020
pigment prints with and written text
50 x 60 cm

Does posterity need community or vice versa?
Seascape / SNDO archive

2020
pigment prints with and written text
50 x 60 cm

© Arcade