Alexis Soul-Gray: Immutable Fragments
709 N. Hill St. inside Asian Center upstairs suite #105 Los Angeles, CA 90012 USA
Saturday, July 22 at 6:00 PM 9:00 PM
Ends Sep 9, 2023
Bel Ami is pleased to present Immutable Fragments, Alexis Soul-Gray’s first solo exhibition in the US. The corruption of innocence is a key theme in Alexis Soul-Gray’s paintings, drawings and collages. Soul-Gray explores the two-fold quality of tenderness, which implies kindness and also sensitivity to pain. Combining exquisite linework with brutally expressive drips, Soul-Gray’s childish figures emote playfulness, fragility, and longing. The artist delicately renders, and then violently rubs out, scenes of posing and performing children, evoking a lightness of being yet simultaneously suggesting the haptic burden of their bodies. Soul-Gray paints to process her lived experience, but rather than depict her own family she works from imagery in Renaissance art, found photo albums, and 20th century advertisements. She sources British knitwear catalogues from the 1950s-90s, because they evoke not only the look but also the touch and feel of another era, ‘where family is often faked but also unpredictably felt,’ acknowledging the fallibility of perception and memory; the most cherished ones are also the most embellished. Through veils of washes in blue and gold, Soul-Gray’s children seem to be trapped in a vision of the past, and then rise to the surface with a burst of lifelike realism. Alexis Soul-Gray (b. 1980, UK), lives and works in Devon. She earned an MA in Painting at The Royal College of Art, London (2023) and a BA in Drawing at Camberwell College of Arts, London (2003). She is an alumni of The Royal Drawing School, London having completed the Postgraduate Drawing Year in 2007. Solo exhibitions include Wetterling Gallery, Stockholm (2022); Irving Contemporary, Oxford (2022); Exeter Phoenix Gallery, Exeter (2022); and Delphian Gallery, London (2021). Recent group exhibitions include Paper, Tristan Hoare Gallery, London (2023); Conscious Unconscious, Pippy Houldsworth Gallery, London (2023); Women Celebrating Surrealism, Islington Arts Factory, London (2022); What Was lost, PAPER Gallery, Manchester (2022). She was the winner of the Delphian Open in 2021 and recipient of The Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation Grant in both 2021 and 2022.
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