
For
Two Is the Most Imperfect of All Numbers, 2011, oil on panel
with gold leaf, 19'' x 13''
Hannah
Barrett
Family
Jewels
November
18 - December 30, 2011
Opening
Reception:
Saturday
November 19th, 4 - 6pm
Howard
Yezerski is pleased to present The Family Jewels, a series depicting
the glamorous appearance and lifestyle of royal hermaphrodites,
by Hannah Barrett. The divine beings garden, ride horseback, take
tea, frolic in the bedroom, and cook dinner in the castle kitchen.
Like many an official portrait of the Christ Child, the genitals
are exposed in order to verify their unique status. These are
enviable creatures possessing everything a person could possibly
want from multi-sexuality to opulent surroundings.
Although ancient in concept, the hermaphrodite is the way of the
future, the solution to endless dissatisfaction with the limitations
of male and female. The past, while it is full of great art and
paintings, is unfortunately saturated with inhumanity. Even the
imagination cannot free itself from history, because something
is always based on something else. The world of the hermaphrodites
has digested the past and created an unexpected ending to the
story.
The Family Jewels span a three- year period and consist of collages
and drawings, which are collected in a Zine, and paintings. In
the collages the sources for the images are visible including
the parts of HRH Queen Elizabeth II and Adolf Hitler that were
cannibalized and hybridized to create the figures. When designing
the hermaphrodite prototype, what better people to start with
than the very two individuals, who, more than anyone else in the
20th century, symbolize master race? The drawings fuse the pieces
together and obscure their origins, while the paintings seduce
with color and gold. Although the pictures are graphic, and specific,
they are frankly imaginary and open to interpretation.
This is Barrett’s third show at the gallery and the most
explicit in the theme of androgyny that runs through all of Barrett’s
figuration. Concurrent with The Family Jewels, is another completely
different body of work by Barrett, Tea with the Gibsons, on view
at Childs Gallery from November 9th – December 13th. Tea
with the Gibsons is a series of invented portraits based on the
Boston family, the Gibsons, a microcosm on some of the largest
and most broadly painted of Barrett’s canvases, whereas
The Family Jewels cram a macrocosm into small panels reminiscent
of Bosch and Cranach. Together the two exhibitions demonstrate
an unmistakable consistency in Barrett’s work, and its surprising
way of re-inventing style and approach to dual obsessions with
gender and time.