Judy Miller: Into the belly of the whale
Gallery listing and Media Release
Judy Miller: Into
the belly of the whale
28 April – 21 May 2011
bartley
+ company art, 56A Ghuznee Street, Wellington
www.bartleyandcompanyart.co.nz
Judy Millar’s
new exhibition of works on paper at Bartley + Company Art
abounds with references to the world despite its seeming
abstraction. While painting these works, Millar was reading
Herman Melville’s classic American novel Moby Dick and the
exhibition can be seen as her tribute to the writer. As
Melville immerses readers in the world of whaling and the
sea, so too Millar’s richly layered gestural paintings
immerse viewers in painting’s possibilities.
I am
receiving the sensation of content without the narrative
devices that usually deliver it.
Curator
Justin Paton said this in conversation with Judy Millar
prior to her participation in the 2009 Venice Biennale and
the observation seems particularly pertinent to this new
body of work. Millar rarely titles her paintings but all the
works on paper in this exhibition have titles that reference
the novel and Captain Ahab’s pursuit of the great white
sperm whale, Moby Dick. They also make explicit the
engagement of her painting with the world. Millar’s
painting may be perceived as abstract but she has long been
interested in the depiction of three-dimensional space. Her
distinctive large brush strokes are here overlaid with a
complex myriad of fine slashing jagged lines and smaller
sweeps of paint that flow and halt and turn in all
directions to create richly suggestive forms.
Judy Millar
is one of New Zealand’s most highly regarded and
internationally successful artists. When she opens a new
exhibition at the Venice Biennale (the global art world’s
most prestigious event) at the end of next month, she will
become the first New Zealand artist to have participated in
two successive Venice Biennales. In 2009 she represented New
Zealand, along with Frances Upritchard, and she has been
invited back this year to participate in a major collateral
event. The exhibition Personal Structures, ends