PUBLIC Gallery is proud to present Felix Carr’s debut UK solo exhibition Only my Right hand is Mine. The exhibition features a new series of paintings in which Carr explores both formalistic and subjective aspects of process in order to develop a tableau of bizarre, self-referential narratives that evoke sentiments of yearning, expectation and self-hood.
The exhibition is a culmination of Carr’s developing practice in which he invites gates painting’s enduring relationship with the figure. Through continual negotiation with form and context, the works are marked by their fragmentary nature and emphasis on gesture and expressivity. The artist tests the interstices between representation and abstraction, fluidly working to create imagery that is at once elusive and physically in mate. O en a result of continued reworking and alteration, the works develop a palimpsestic quality. Spectral forms peek through the surface, evincing layers of process and depth in which one can trace a history of the image.
Within these works, the depicted body features as a site for play and potentiation - a sphere of sensation in which gesture guides the image. Marks and lines bleed freely into one another, compounds of movement that render the figures therein as in ma ons of exchange. Despite their apparent slipperiness, these images remain anchored in the concrete of a representational language - as polysemous, indexical en ties.
Each painting is encoded with symbolic motifs. Meaning is transferred through a process of interrogation that equates the physical act of painting with experiential aspects of the body, where images are carriers of mood and sensation. Symbolism is o en contextualised within a framework of literary and art-historical narrative and in this respect, the works operate analogously within an anatomy of subjects, signs and language.
Carr’s paintings o er themselves to a wider interrogation of abstract painting - humorous and sincere - of its capacities and relevance as a tool, with which one can create and conceal, explore and exploit. In their evolution, the paintings tease and entice the viewer to interpret their deferred or inconspicuous narratives.