Johannes Vogt Gallery is pleased to inaugurate its new exhibition space at 958 Madison Avenue with a solo show by New York based artist Abby Leigh. For her first show with the gallery Leigh is presenting her most recent body of work on Dibond, Sledgehammer Paintings. Powerful and lyrical at the same time, this new direction in Leigh’s work marks a departure within her practice. Her strict geometric vocabulary expands into new territory that allows for figurative associations. Abby Leigh is joining the roster of represented gallery artists.
Leigh’s works invite the viewer to travel inwards and explore our very own desires. As sympathetic beings, we have the tendency to want to fix things. And not only do we want to make an ill thing better, we also want to be the disclosed agents responsible for these noble actions. This then becomes a reciprocal relationship. In our scenario let’s envision that the ill thing in question wasn’t found ill, but perfectly intact and whole - until we chose to damage it, if only to become its responsible restorer to fix it up again. These psychological conundrums are surprisingly not uncommon in the dynamics of our complex system of relationships and translate into the artistic process of creating a thing from nothing.
Abby Leigh’s new Sledgehammer Paintings are innocent vessels, which have endured these questions - quite physically. They have unknowingly donated their nerveless bodies to this experiment of destruction - becoming motionless vessels for pain and care. As objects, we can use them to ponder, “how different, really, is destruction from construction, pain from care?” Their apathetic skins hold markers to these very intentions and actions - mended dents and scarred cuts. A palette of colors, which could be described as pleasant, even tender, further complicates their ultimate surface rendering. These sweet tones, painted over the Dibond substrates in pigment, oil and wax, are not typically associated with such mutilation. But it is these layers of choices - executed in painterly gestures and playful mark-making, which gives way to a complex being - and as with most beings from the inside out.