Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan
Installation view of Seven Sculptures at Sunset at Josh Lilley, presenting Kathleen Ryan

Artworks

Embrace by Kathleen Ryan, 2018
Receiver by Kathleen Ryan, 2018
Fool's Mold by Kathleen Ryan, 2018
Sour Pearls by Kathleen Ryan, 2018
Semi-Precious Bone by Kathleen Ryan, 2018
Satellite in Repose by Kathleen Ryan, 2018
Fountain of Youth by Kathleen Ryan, 2018

Kathleen Ryan

Seven Sculptures at Sunset

4 October – 1 December 2018

Josh Lilley is pleased to present Seven Sculptures at Sunset, American artist Kathleen Ryan's second exhibition at the gallery.

Ivy vines creep around a block of stone. 84 parrots perch on the recumbent frame of a giant satellite dish, the sort that could collect hundreds of exotic stations in the 1980s. Three lemons in different stages of decay describe the nuanced culture of mould. A hanging basket of industrial iron callipers cradles a cornucopia of fruit. Ryan creates sculpture in the palette of the American vernacular, drawing on trinkets and souvenirs, hobbies and leisure, the rudimentary phenomena of nature, or the home accoutrements that serve as modest markers of status. Her subjects are the stuff of consumerism, the stuff people put around themselves and understand. We know these objects, what they are and what they do, and there is comfort in familiarity: it brings inanimate things near to us, and makes them part of us. This is the essence of the everyday object, dissolving into our lives.

But these objects do not dissolve. In wet clay, the parrots are squeezed into being, then cooked and killed, glazed forever. They still bear fingerprints, though. Gem, pearl and bone beads accumulate on the surfaces of the lemons like cells dividing. The bronze threads and jade leaves of ivy dance around the granite blocks heavy geometric mass. The parabola of the satellite dish wants to receive the sky, but the birds just want to sit on it. Ryan pulls apart and reassembles her subjects and the narratives they bear, contrasting sensual materials with no-nonsense units of industry, explosion with containment, speed with precision, elegance with kitsch, and gravity with weightlessness. She compromises her subjects by creating tension in the identity and the will of their materials. They are not familiar, because they will not settle down.

The works in this exhibition are elegiac, strong memento mori drawn from centuries of art history as much as the Tuesday misery of finding citrus going bad. Jewel-encrusted fruit call to reliquaries; the creeping vines tell the gravestone how much time has passed. The mouldy lemons are returning to the earth, from where they came. Death is something to consider. And yet, arrested in the amber between day and night, there is nothing to mourn.

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. In 2017 she received the commission from the Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, for its annual project in the iconic Theseus Temple, and she will be the subject of a solo exhibition at the MIT List Visual Arts Center in February 2019. Group exhibitions include Simon Lee, Andrew Kreps and Tanya Bonakdar, New York; The Pit and Various Small Fires, Los Angeles; and many others. Ryan is participating in Frieze Sculpture 2018 with Josh Lilley in Regents Park, running concurrently with the opening of this exhibition.