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A signal urgent but breaking: Yale MFA Painting & Printmaking Class of 2023

15 Jun, 2023 - 28 Jul, 2023

Perrotin is pleased to present a signal urgent but breaking, a group exhibition by the Yale MFA Painting and Printmaking Class of 2023, which will be supplemented by a series of programs envisioned and executed by the class.

Paint clinging to small, unexpected spaces; everyday stains—tobacco, soil, shellac—relocated to canvas; hints of language within visual fields; gestural trails of brushwork; tiny stitches and scratches; mere centimeters of disruption. . .these are the places of intimacy and incident in the work of the twenty-two artists who graduated from the Yale School of Art’s graduate program in painting and printmaking in spring 2023. Emerging into a post-pandemic cultural landscape, the cohort reminds us of the profound lessons learned since 2020: to dig deep roots and hold as precious our immediate worlds; to value the exploration and expression of self, extracted from conventional routines and institutional systems; and to recognize the vital need to care intensely about those who navigate these precarious times with us.

The most minute of their highly considered gestures acknowledges the possibility of individual agency and the power to resist and change that might be wrought through the accumulation of micro-acts. Despite its association with a period when the studio walls of abstract expressionists were shields behind which some artists and critics claimed to transcend the world (a world, to note, also recovering from global trauma. . .that of World War II), perhaps it is best not to abandon the idea of painting as a field of action. Rather, through these recent graduates’ work, we can prioritize activity embedded in the everyday, in identity, in family, and in history. This renewed sense of action is oriented to telling specific rather than universal stories, signaling a sense of urgency rather than timelessness.1 In depicting labor that is generally unseen, postulating multi-species points of view, and addressing the complex experiences of post-colonialism, race, and gender, these artists produce strong frameworks for observation, articulation, and resolution with aspirations to impact outlooks alongside form.



Perrotin is pleased to present a signal urgent but breaking, a group exhibition by the Yale MFA Painting and Printmaking Class of 2023, which will be supplemented by a series of programs envisioned and executed by the class.

Paint clinging to small, unexpected spaces; everyday stains—tobacco, soil, shellac—relocated to canvas; hints of language within visual fields; gestural trails of brushwork; tiny stitches and scratches; mere centimeters of disruption. . .these are the places of intimacy and incident in the work of the twenty-two artists who graduated from the Yale School of Art’s graduate program in painting and printmaking in spring 2023. Emerging into a post-pandemic cultural landscape, the cohort reminds us of the profound lessons learned since 2020: to dig deep roots and hold as precious our immediate worlds; to value the exploration and expression of self, extracted from conventional routines and institutional systems; and to recognize the vital need to care intensely about those who navigate these precarious times with us.

The most minute of their highly considered gestures acknowledges the possibility of individual agency and the power to resist and change that might be wrought through the accumulation of micro-acts. Despite its association with a period when the studio walls of abstract expressionists were shields behind which some artists and critics claimed to transcend the world (a world, to note, also recovering from global trauma. . .that of World War II), perhaps it is best not to abandon the idea of painting as a field of action. Rather, through these recent graduates’ work, we can prioritize activity embedded in the everyday, in identity, in family, and in history. This renewed sense of action is oriented to telling specific rather than universal stories, signaling a sense of urgency rather than timelessness.1 In depicting labor that is generally unseen, postulating multi-species points of view, and addressing the complex experiences of post-colonialism, race, and gender, these artists produce strong frameworks for observation, articulation, and resolution with aspirations to impact outlooks alongside form.



Contact details

Sunday
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM
Wednesday - Saturday
10:00 AM - 6:00 PM
130 Orchard Street Lower East Side - New York, NY, USA 10002

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