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Genevieve Gaignard

Colliding Visions: Contemporary California Collage

May 18October 15, 2023

Riverside Art Museum

This image illustrates a link to the exhibition titled Genevieve Gaignard in<br><i>Colliding Visions: Contemporary California Collage</i>

Genevieve Gaignard
“And Still We Bloom: Black Girl Magic Is Sometimes Blue,” 2022
Mixed media collage on panel
36" x 24" [HxW] (91.44 x 60.96 cm); 37 ¹⁄₄" x 25 ¹⁄₄" x 2 ¹⁄₄" [HxWxD] (94.61 x 64.13 x 5.71 cm) framed
Inventory #GEN394
Courtesy of the artist and Vielmetter Los Angeles
Photo credit: Brica Wilcox
gen394_hires-(8).jpg
Genevieve Gaignard
“And Still We Bloom: Soul Flower,” 2022
Mixed media collage on panel
36" x 24" [HxW] (91.44 x 60.96 cm); 37 ¹⁄₄" x 25 ¹⁄₄" x 2 ¹⁄₄" [HxWxD] (94.61 x 64.13 x 5.71 cm) framed
Inventory #GEN376
Courtesy of the artist and Vielmetter Los Angeles
Photo credit: Brica Wilcox
gen376_hires-(5).jpg

Illuminating concepts of identity, race, gender, and memory,  Colliding Visions: Contemporary California Collage features 25 works by five Southern California artists – Chelle Barbour, Genevieve Gaignard, Patricia Jessup-Woodlin, Betye Saar, and Brenna Youngblood – whose unique viewpoints have been assembled as a visual conversation between the museum walls. Representing a range of styles in contemporary collage, all five artists use a distinctive combination of photography, cut paper, and found objects. After opening at Riverside Art Museum on Thursday, May 18, 2023, the exhibition is on view thru Sunday, October 15, 2023. An artist reception takes place on Sunday, May 21, 2023.

Colliding Visions: Contemporary California Collage includes Chelle Barbour’s signature Afro-futurist collages of black women, while Patricia Jessup-Woodlin’s compositions focus on women in dreamlike banners that evoke a romantic past. Brenna Youngblood’s large boldly painted canvases incorporate televisions, microwaves, dogs and bricks but no human figures, creating tableaus of eerie domesticity. Genevieve Gaignard’s works use the iconic figure of “Aunt Jemima” as a counterpoint to images of young glamorous women and sensuous flowers. Iconic assemblage artist Betye Saar has incorporated many of the same techniques as the other artists over her long career; however, she often includes family photos and personal mementoes.