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Nicole Eisenman

Nicole Eisenman/Matrix 248

May 3July 14, 2013

Berkeley Art Museum & Pacific Film Archive

This image illustrates a link to the exhibition titled Nicole Eisenman: Nicole Eisenman/Matrix 248

Images

Nicole Eisenman, Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248, May 3, 2013 - July 14, 2013 (installation view); courtesy of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Photo: Sibila Savage

Nicole Eisenman
Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248

Nicole Eisenman, Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248, May 3, 2013 - July 14, 2013 (installation view); courtesy of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Photo: Sibila Savage

Nicole Eisenman
Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248

Nicole Eisenman, Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248, May 3, 2013 - July 14, 2013 (installation view); courtesy of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Photo: Sibila Savage

Nicole Eisenman
Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248

Nicole Eisenman, Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248, May 3, 2013 - July 14, 2013 (installation view); courtesy of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Photo: Sibila Savage

Nicole Eisenman
Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248

Nicole Eisenman, Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248, May 3, 2013 - July 14, 2013 (installation view); courtesy of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive. Photo: Sibila Savage

Nicole Eisenman
Nicole Eisenman/MATRIX 248

Press Release

MATRIX 248 showcases the work of New York based artist Nicole Eisenman (b. 1965), who became prominent in the 1990s and has been steadfastly expanding dialogues surrounding painting and drawing ever since. Having come of age in the East Village in the 1980s, Eisenmans work reflects myriad sources both art historical and popular, culling from what writer and critic Lynne Tillman has referred to as a vast image bank that ranges from eighties punk ephemera to canonical works from the history of art. Parisian cafe settings found in late nineteenth-century paintings by Manet and Degas become open-air beer gardens one might find in present-day Berlin or Brooklyn, with the smartphones on the tables locating the scene in time. Intermixing styles associated with American Regionalism and the Italian Renaissance with German Expressionism, Eisenman brings history to bear in their canvases and drawings, yet twists the imagery to infuse these familiar forms with their own incisive social commentary and aesthetic voice.Gender and suggestions of romantic liaisons remain open questions in most of Eisenmans compositions. The articulated muscular (female) figure has predominated in their oeuvre. They filter the heroic style of Michelangelo through their feminist and lesbian subject matter, yet in recent years their work has become more abstract and less overtly narrative, encompassing psychological ambiguity and looser painterly forms. Decidedly contemporary, their dark, moody genre scenes remain moored in universal themes of everyday life: politics, romance, the economy, social gatherings, and isolation. This exhibition focuses on a selection of paintings and prints that the artist has made over the last several years that coalesce around the theme of economic and social hardship.In conjunction with MATRIX 248, BAM/PFA presents Ballet of Heads, a thematic group exhibition drawn from the collection that explores the polymorphous nature of the figure in art history. The selection includes important Eisenman influences such as George Grosz and William Hogarth.

Artists