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for
immediate release:
- October 18 – November 24, 2007
- Opening Reception: Thursday, October 18, 6-8pm
MARGAUX
WILLIAMSON
The Girls show Dostoyevsky the new darkness
Marvelli Gallery is pleased to present Margaux Williamson’s first
solo exhibition in New York. The nine paintings in The Girls show
Dostoyevsky the new darkness come out of a year of conversations
between Margaux Williamson and the writer Sheila Heti.
It was in the midst of this year that Williamson made a small painting
study, from which this show takes its name. In it, two slutty gyrating
hula-girls with wide lipsticked smiles and flat faces join hands and
show a grim Dostoyevsky “the new darkness” through a hole
in a shiny grey surface.
The new darkness connotes an age that mixes a despair for the world,
and a pessimism about the past and the long-term future, with a genuine
excitement and joy about new ways of thinking and being. It also involves
a creeping suspicion of oneself.
Margaux Williamson’s interest in surface, transparency, literalness,
the middlebrow, and reality comes from deciphering the cast of Friends,
the ideas of Werner Herzog, and her life. Her new paintings are funny
and strong, deliberate and quiet. Their sculptural definiteness lends
them a feeling of inevitability.
In the new painting 2007, old candle drippings form a thick
mass resembling Michelangelo’s comical body sacks, left behind
after the souls depart. On top sit the small bright candles of pop.
Self-portrait as Future Buddha suggests that one might be a
giant fat man with nothing to do in the world.
Margaux Williamson was born in Pittsburgh in 1976, and moved to Canada
from Texas at 13. She has lived in Toronto since 2000. She has exhibited
in Toronto, Los Angeles and New York.
For further information or images of the works included in the show,
please contact Marcello Marvelli or Sonel Breslav at 212-627 3363 or
info@marvelligallery.com.
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