SHANNON FINLEY
![]()
511 West 22nd Street New York NY 10011 515 West 22nd Street New York NY 10011
525 West 22nd Street New York NY 10011 520 West 21st Street New York NY 10011
When I visited Shannon Finley in his East Berlin studio earlier this month, he likened his work to decorating the void. While the comment seemed to be said in passing, in a kind of jest, it spoke to a deep motivation beneath Finleyās practice. In fact, the notion of a decorated void offers a compelling entry point for considering the new group of vibrantly kaleidoscopic paintings that comprise this exhibition. How might these works be seen to occupy the shifting and interrelated ground of decoration, ornament, and pattern? How could moving along a trail of associations with these aesthetic approachesāfrom medieval conceptions of ornament to the architectural theorizing of Robert Venturi and Denise Scott Brownāopen up ways of thinking about Finleyās painting?
But first, the void. Complete emptiness, a vacuum, a hollow that it hurts to imagine. Ruminating on this state of nothingness is often associated with a nihilist negation of meaning, though the French philosopher Simone Weil positions the void instead as a revelatory space. In her 1947 Gravity and Grace she writes,
ā
To accept a void in ourselves is supernatural. Where is the energy to be found for an act which has nothing to counterbalance it?...
One only escapes from the laws of this world in lightning ļ¬ashes. Instants when everything stands still, instants of contemplation, of pure intuition.ā1
Even though Finleyās painting is visually resonant with ļ¬ashes of lightning and he has continued to hone a process over the past two decades in which moments of contemplation and intuition are key, these paintings donāt seem to speak to spiritual breakthroughs. This distinction is significant, as it sets his paintings apart from histories of abstraction that are keyed to transcendence. Indeed, these worksā bright sheens and fractured planes may have less to bear on supernatural reckoning, than on the everyday navigatingāthe continuous decorating, if you willāthat is daily
life. Time spent doing one thing or another, as meaningful or meaningless as it may be, is rife with both delight and despair. These works have a capaciousness, as if Finley were attempting to fit as much information as possible on the canvas. As hard-edged shapes intersect and overlap in a contest of color, each fragment in each composition appears essential to its cacophonous whole.
Ornamentāas a concept or as an aesthetic propositionāwas also originally constituted as something integral to a whole, rather than as an added ļ¬ourish. The late historian of Indian art Ananda K. Coomaraswamy traces the medieval origins of the term, which stand counter to the termās vaguely denigrative connotation in contemporary parlance, emphasizing that
āour use of the word ādecorativeā would have been abusive, as if we spoke of a mere millinery or upholstery: for all the words purporting decoration in many languages, Medieval Latin included, referred originally not to anything that could be added to an already finished and effective product merely to please the eye or ear, but to the completion of anything with whatever might be necessary to its functioning.ā2
By way of example, he suggests that āa sword, for example, would āornamentā a knight, as virtue āornamentsā the soul or knowledge the mind.ā
With this in mind, one might consider the ornamental quality of the various shapes that comprise Finley compositions. Each componentāa triangle, a rhomboidā comes to function as a kind of key that cinches the integrity of the whole. Take the large-scale landscape format, Known Unknowns, for instance, in which Finley melds rounded and angular forms, and mixes deep blues and purples with tinges of neon pink, green, and yellow. As this wide variation coalesces into an image, each subtle ļ¬ourish of color or bisection of line appears inextricable from the cohesive whole. Working sequentially in a series of layers, Finley tapes off parts of the canvas to segment his shapes in an array of colors. In a process he has honed over the past two decades, he moves from a digital mock-up of the composition, to the canvas,
then back to the digital again, with a photograph of the painting that he manipulates to test out next steps in altering the shapes and colors. Until the painting is finished, every aspect of its constellation could change, and this sense of shifting motion remains palpable in the work. His process also drives a relationship between form and color that oscillates between confrontation and symbiosis. A circle is bisected by the side of a triangle in the top left of the composition; its top half is almost magenta, and its bottom is a rusty blue. Another circle hovering at the top of the picture plane toward the center of the composition is split into hemispheres: a bright, gradated green atop an orangey yellow. The painting invites you to focus in on details like these then step back again to take in the whole. Itās like a puzzle, in that each shape seems to have secured its spot within the whole, in a piecing together that has an almost tactical quality. More game metaphors: think of it like dominos (slide one shape out and the whole thing tumbles).
Shannon Finley has taken on the obligation toward the difficult whole. Consider the particularly complex composition of pointed shapes in Aftermathematics, for instance, where seemingly countless layers of triangular forms concatenate in an intricate picture plane. Itās as if a regulating repetition of pattern attempted to harness this dance of triangles but couldnāt constrain their continuous variance in how theyāre spliced and shaded. This whole is hard to parse. It presents a visual challenge; this is what makes it intriguing.
The weighty and poignant phraseāāthe obligation toward the difficult wholeāā is lifted from the title of a chapter in Robert Venturiās 1966 book Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture, a hallmark of postmodernism that he wrote in close collaboration with his wife, the architect Denise Scott Brown. The book was central to their effort to restore the place of ornament and the decorative treatment of surfaces in architecture. They assert that
āthe difficult whole in an architecture of complexity and contradiction includes multiplicity and diversity of elements in relationships that are inconsistent.ā
While Venturi is writing about architecture, the ideas he raises can be evocatively transposed to Finleyās painting. Venturi advocates for an architecture that āinvolves the art of the fragmentā and employs the idea of inļ¬ection to get at the relationship of component parts to the whole:
āBy inļ¬ecting toward something outside themselves, the parts contain their own linkage.⦠Inļ¬ection is a means of distinguishing diverse parts while implying continuity.ā3
Such language can also be lifted to address Finleyās oeuvre. In the fractured picture plane of Aftermathematics, as well as the darker-toned Dragonaut and the vibrantly hued Mind Expander, angular shapes encounter each other, and shapes often transgress other shapes, occasionally meeting at pinpoint edges to fan out into kaleidoscopes. Each shape appears at once distinct and inextricable from
the greater whole. In a play with perspective, the composition in Dragonaut shifts between an impression of perspectival depth and ļ¬atness, like a three-dimensional origami shape that is ļ¬attened again along its folds.
Beneath this physical understanding of inļ¬ection lurks the way in which meaning inļ¬ects material. Shannon Finleyās paintings offer themselves up as sounding boards, ready to bounce off the inļ¬ection of connotation, association, and projection inherent in putting abstract painting into language. They can stand on their own. They have processed the artistās experience of life into an abstract form and can become a site of processing for their viewers, too. Bring to me what you will, they seem to say, whether you see fertile ground for musings on ornament, the neons of acrylic nails, the glint of car paint, Bauhaus forms, transcendental triangles, or any other reshuffling of histories of abstraction. Crucially, you will also see yourself as the sheen of the paintings are almost reļ¬ective, occasionally catching the viewer in their surface. While their compositions are tightāverging on resolutionāthey maintain an openness. Take it as an invitation to enter.
1. Simone Weil. Gravity and Grace. Routledge Classics, 2008.
2. Ananda K. Coomaraswamy. āThe Nature of Medieval Art,ā Studies in Comparative Religion 15, no. 1-2 (Winter-Spring, 1983).
3. Robert Venturi. Complexity and Contradiction in Architecture. New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 2019.
Aftermathematics, 2022 Acrylic on linen
47 1/4 x 70 7/8 inches 120 x 180 cm
Dragonaut, 2022
Acrylic on linen
47 1/4 x 70 7/8 inches 120 x 180 cm
Encrypted and Lost, 2022
Acrylic on linen 39 3/8 x 39 3/8 inches 100 x 100 cm
Keplerās Dream II, 2022
Acrylic on linen
59 x 47 1/4 inches
150 x 120 cm
Known Unknowns, 2022
Acrylic on linen
47 1/4 x 70 7/8 inches 120 x 180 cm
18
Levitation Session, 2022 Acrylic on linen 59 x 47 1/4 inches 150 x 120 cm
Mind Expander, 2022
Acrylic on linen
78 3/4 x 63 inches
200 x 160 cm
Spacehopper, 2022 Acrylic on linen 59 x 47 1/4 inches 150 x 120 cm
The Pyrocene, 2022 Acrylic on linen
59 x 47 1/4 inches 150 x 120 cm
26
Vector Quest, 2022 Acrylic on linen
27 1/2 x 39 3/8 inches
70 x 100 cm
Flicker, 2022 Acrylic on linen 15 3/4 x 12 1/2 inches 40 x 32 cm
Inner Space, 2022
Acrylic on linen
15 3/4 x 12 1/2 inches 40 x 32 cm
Tuned Realities, 2022 Acrylic on linen 15 3/4 x 12 1/2 inches 40 x 32 cm
Witcher, 2022
Acrylic on linen
15 3/4 x 12 1/2 inches 40 x 32 cm
Born in Ontario, Canada in 1974 Lives and works in Berlin, Germany
1999
Nova Scotia College of Art and Design, Halifax, Canada 1998
The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Arts and Science, New York, NY
2023
Miles McEnery Gallery, New York, NY Mies van der Rohe Haus, Berlin, Germany
2021
Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany
āCascade,ā Miles McEnery Gallery, New York, NY āRupprecht Geiger | Shannon Finley: Licht, Farbe, Raum,ā Kunsthaus Kaufbeuren, Kaufbeuren, Germany 2020
āEnd of Line,ā Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago, IL 2019
āConvergence,ā Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany 2016
āINTERFERENCE,ā Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago, IL Lora Reynolds Gallery, Austin, TX āFuture Shock,ā Culture Circle Gallery, Hamburg, Germany
2015
Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany
āPaintings for the Future,ā Jessica Silverman, San Francisco, CA
2014
Susanne Vielmetter, Los Angeles Projects, Los Angeles, CA Vladimir Restoin Roitfield, New York, NY
2013
Maruani and Noirhomme Gallery, Brussels, Belgium
2012
āShannon Finley and Rupprecht Geiger,ā Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany āCentury Entropy,ā Bischoff Weiss Gallery, London, United Kingdom
2011
āEncrypted and Lost,ā Galerie Christian Ehrentraut, Berlin, Germany
2010
Silverman Gallery, San Francisco, CA āSpecters into Signals,ā Galerie Christian Ehrentraut, Berlin, Germany
2007
āVector Love,ā Kunst Klub, Berlin, Germany
1999
āex post facto,ā Anna Leonowens Gallery, Halifax, Canada 1997
āNew Paintings,ā Eye Level Gallery, Halifax, Canada āWalk the Line,ā Khyber Center for the Arts, Halifax, Canada
2022
āThree Colors: Blue, White, Red,ā Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany
2021
āThink Big: Itās All About Spaces,ā Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany
2019
āShall we go, you and I while we can,ā Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago, IL
2018
āTomorrowās Dream,ā Neuer Essener, Kunstverein, Essen, Germany
2017
ā40 Years Walter Storms Galerie 1977 ā 2017,ā Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany
2016
āPioneer Lust,ā Lora Reynolds Gallery, Austin, TX
āColouring the Edge,ā 3812 Gallery, Hong Kong āTakashi Murakamiās Superļ¬at Collection,ā Yokohama Museum of Art, Yokohama, Japan
2015
āAppropinquation,ā Carrie Secrist Gallery, Chicago, IL
2014
ā5 years schellingstr. 48,ā Walter Storms Galerie, Munich, Germany
āShifting Optics,ā Upstream Gallery, Amsterdam, Netherlands
āWhite is the Warmest Color,ā Hedge Gallery, San Francisco, CA āNeon-From glowing of art,ā Stadtgalerie, Saarbrücken, Germany
2013
āNeon,ā Museum für Konkrete Kunst, Ingolstadt, Germany
āPainting Forever!,ā KW Institute, Berlin, Germany
āIn the Studio,ā Kunsthalle Athena, Athens, Greece āPhotography, Reconstructedā (curated by Pavel VancĆ”t), Prague Biennale, Prague, Czech Republic
2012
āLinie, Flache, Zeit, Ratskeller,ā Galerie für Zeitgenƶssische Kunst, Berlin, Germany
āAbstract Confusion,ā StƤdtische Galerie Gladbeck, Gladbeck, Germany and Kunsthalle Erfurt, Erfurt, Germany
āKaleidoscope,ā C24 Gallery, New York, NY
2011
āGroup Show,ā Salon der Gegenwart, Hamburg, Germany
āAbstract Confusion,ā b05 ā Kunst- und Kulturzentrum, Montabaur, Germany and Kunstverein Ulm, Ulm, Germany
āLiquid Space,ā Nettie Horn Gallery, London, United Kingdom
āYou Are Here: Berlin ā Tokyo,ā Berlin, Germany and Tokyo, Japan
2010
āKonstruktiv!,ā Beck & Eggeling, Düsseldorf, Germany
āHostile Aestetik Takeover,ā Appartement, Berlin, Germany
āAlien Tourists Part 1, 2, 3,ā The Forgotten Bar/Galerie im Regierungsviertel, Berlin, Germany
ā37 x Now,ā The Forgotten Bar/Galerie im Regierungsviertel, Berlin, Germany
2009
āwasistdas ā09,ā Paris, France āSpirits,ā Stadtbad Wedding, Berlin, Germany
2008
āForrest Gods,ā Secret Garden, Berlin, Germany Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen, Germany
2007
ā400 Blows,ā After the Butcher/Galerie Thomas Kilper, Berlin, Germany
āNew Revolutionary Ghosts (Sandy Video),ā Broadway 1602, New York, NY and Los Angeles, CA āCurse the Tainted Pharoaās (Sandy Performance),ā Galerie Meerrettich, Berlin, Germany
āYou are Here,ā Eel Pie, Berlin, Germany Neuer Aachener Kunstverein, Aachen, Germany
2006
āStarting at the Edge,ā Mushroom Arts, New York, NY 2005
āThree Black Minutes,ā Autocenter, Berlin, Germany āNY Metro,ā University of Pennsylvania, Clarion, PA
2004
āSuper Salon,ā Samson Projects, Boston, MA 2003
āScope,ā Dylan Hotel, New York, NY āGroundswell,ā White Columns, New York, NY
2002
āUnderground,ā Pat Hearn Art Gallery, New York, NY
Georgia Museum of Art, Athens, GA
Museum für Konkrete Kunst, Ingolstadt, Germany
Published on the occasion of the exhibition
2 February ā 11 March 2023
Miles McEnery Gallery
511 West 22nd Street New York NY 10011
tel +1 212 445 0051 www.milesmcenery.com
Publication Ā© 2022 Miles McEnery Gallery All rights reserved Essay Ā© 2022 Camila McHugh
Director of Exhibitions Anastasija Jevtovic, New York, NY
Publications and Archival Assistant Julia Schlank, New York, NY
Photography by anna.k.o., Berlin, Germany
Color separations by Echelon, Los Angeles, CA
Catalogue designed by McCall Associates, New York, NY
ISBN: 978-1-949327-98-4
Cover: Dragonaut, (detail), 2022