Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Solo exhibition at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan

Artworks

Lipstick Rail by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Lipstick Rail (detail) by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Bacchante (Pink Table) by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Bacchante (Pink Table) (detail) by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Untitled (Curtain) by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Light Rail by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Light Rail (detail) by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Untitled by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Untitled (detail) by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Caprice by Kathleen Ryan, 2016
Caprice by Kathleen Ryan, 2016

Kathleen Ryan

Solo exhibition

27 May – 5 July 2016

Josh Lilley is delighted to present the debut solo exhibition of Los Angeles-based sculptor Kathleen Ryan.

In concrete, steel, pewter and second-hand detritus, Kathleen Ryan renders grapes and ivy, shells and pearls, or rays of light. Filtering nature through the instruments of culture and industry, the artist embraces duality wherever it can be found.

Ryans Bacchante works are dramatically oversized bunches of grapes made of concrete-cast balloons connected by metal chains. These solid balls are draped and settled by gravity as exhausted recumbent figures, evoking the female through the luscious and fertile form of the fruit. The Bacchante works are both playful pop forms and cautionary talespure sex, fit to burst, as well as literal balls-and-chains, bleak and heavy.

Light Rail and Lipstick Rail, once custom-fabricated stair rails, are divorced from their reason to exist. Vibrantly colored and flipped on their ends, the rail works remain tight in form and position while their function, meaning and associations open up and expand organically. Light Rail becomes a three-dimensional hieroglyph of a fleeting phenomenon such as lightning or the suns rays, emphasizing the space surrounding it as much as it traces the curve of a line.

Caprice is the brand name of the creamy, iridescent bowling ball that forms the pearl of Caprice, an oyster made of concrete bowls and a hardware-store chrome hinge. Caprice is a sudden, unpredictable change, as of one's mind or the weather, or a woman's name, a temptress' name. Perhaps this sculpture is a woman. Perhaps Venus is the bowling ball pearl named Caprice.

Perhaps the pearl is the key to the exhibition: treasure made of trash; a collection of simple, common shapes and materials; a rough, dry exterior and fleshy, pink interior; thrift-store Americana and concrete, bound together as one.

Kathleen Ryan (b. 1984, Santa Monica) holds an MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles. She has presented solo exhibitions at Cc Foundation & Art Centre, Shanghai; Arsenal, New York; Josh Lilley, London; and Ghebaly Gallery, Los Angeles. Group exhibitions include Simon Lee, Andrew Kreps and Tanya Bonakdar, New York; The Pit and Various Small Fires, Los Angeles; and many others.