Freight + Volume is excited to announce "Correspondences," an exhibition of new paintings by Jennifer Coates. Diverging from her food-centered paintings, spotlighted in her previous solo exhibition at the gallery, "All U Can Eat," her new works feature abstracted landscapes grounded in an engagement with early modernism and an exploration of color relationships.
The paintings on display began as an accumulation of pen and colored pencil drawings, driven by Coates' fascination with the ways in which the brain "imposes itself onto the world around us" and seeks out order in chaos. Developing and refining motifs drawn from nature into the stylized, kaleidoscopic forms that populate her canvases, Coates balances the immediacy of observation with the depth of a sophisticated artistic practice. Contrasting tightly controlled passages with oozing stains and spills, her attention to the materiality of paint lends her a work an almost visceral physicality, reminiscent of hallucinatory, psychedelic states and the phenomenon of closed-eye visuals.
These visual qualities reflect her interest in synthesizing the natural world with lived experience and the contingencies of modern life, dissolving the barriers between the organic and synthetic. Coates finds an analogy for this facet of her practice in Charles Baudelaire’s poem “Correspondences”: “Nature is a temple in which living pillars / Sometimes give voice to confused words; / Man passes there through forests of symbols / Which look at him with understanding eyes.” The pigments used in "Spring Trees" and "Meadow," for example, originate in modern chemical processes, though they are deployed in the representation of bucolic natural scenes. Coates' radiant palette imparts a surreal quality to the works, and the shifting balance of color harmonies and tensions bears its own momentum, intertwined with the fragmented compositions of the paintings.
The work of early Modernist painters such as Matisse, Kandinsky, and Klee, amongst others, and their absorption of the teachings of mystic writers has a palpable impact on Coates' paintings of natural subjects; and the influence of Mondrian, especially his refracted abstractions of trees, is particularly embedded in "Correspondences." Treading the line between seemingly metaphysical abstraction and an exaltation of paint's physicality, Coates' work offers a visionary take on the natural world and the landscape, broadening its parameters and expanding its allusive potential.