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The Ripening - Opening Reception
The Ripening - Opening Reception

Thu, Feb 16

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Pen + Brush

The Ripening - Opening Reception

Join us for the opening reception of Pen + Brush's first exhibition of 2023, "The Ripening" curated by Parker Daley Garcia and Birdie Piccininni; featuring artists Hedwig Brouckaert, Aimee Jones, Sascha Mallon, Felli Maynard, Fumi Nagasaka, Samantha Nye, Kristen Pedote, Laura Beth Reese, and more.

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Time & Location

Feb 16, 2023, 6:00 PM – 8:00 PM

Pen + Brush, 29 E 22nd St, New York, NY 10010, USA

About the Event

Pen + Brush is pleased to present our first exhibition of 2023, The Ripening curated by Parker Daley Garcia with Birdie Piccininni, opening February 16th and open to the public through April 15th. Loosely based on Édouard Glissant’s book of the same name, The Ripening puts forth a shared process, where trauma, fluidity, and choice intersect, as a way of exploring the state of identity, specifically, gendered (or lack thereof) identity today. Artists here explore various states of 'otherhood', pain, desire, and power as ways of self-actualizing identity. Much like the process of ripening, this exhibition blurs the realms of dream and reality as it explores the capacity and fluidity of gender to become and, indeed, unbecome. Works put forth here document and envision complexities of differences in our shared world. Multitudes are put forth, as are universal truths, while hedging toward a dynamic and unpredictable future. Featured Artists: Hedwig Brouckaert, Aimee Jones, Sascha Mallon, Felli Maynard, Fumi Nagasaka, Samantha Nye, Kristen Pedote, Laura Beth Reese, Laurel Richardson, Victoria Salzman, Fay Sanders, Jovan C. Speller, Alison Stinley, Jia Sung, Damaris Swass. 

PRESS RELEASE-

Pen + Brush announces our first exhibition of 2023, The Ripening curated by Parker Daley Garcia with Birdie Piccininni, opening February 16th – April 15th. Loosely based on Édourard Glissant’s writing, The Ripening represents the state of identity today, specifically, gendered identity. Artists explore identity, fluidity, and the pain of the ‘other’ as a way of self-actualizing identity. Much like the process of ripening, this exhibition blurs the realms of dream and reality as it explores the capacity and fluidity of gender to become and, indeed, unbecome. Works put forth here document and envision complexities of differences in our shared world. Multitudes are put forth, as are universal truths, while hedging toward a dynamic and unpredictable future.

While connecting to one another has never been easier and our world exists at just the touch of the screen, we can fail at times to see our interconnectedness. The Ripening tackles this counter-parallel (divergence) by bringing forth both, self-articulation and collective identity. A large-scale ceramic work by Hedwig Brouckaert, for example, focuses on the “intense form of individualism that capitalism propagates and idolizes,” while putting forth the notion that, “we are alienated and painfully separated from each other and are forgetting what connects us”. While Kristin Pedote’s sculptures renegotiate and create conflicted desires of the universal fetishization and objectification of the feminine form in order to “[…] both make fun of it and live it at the same time.” These works stand as apart as they are together. Community is found through this hard-fought process of ripening as the individual. Like Glissant, artists featured in this exhibition raise fundamental questions of identity, immigration, relation, diversity, and difference.

One universality put forth by the artists exhibited here is the inevitability of pain and trauma in the becoming, the ripening, of the other, the self-actualized. From local to global, from paints to fibers, works born from the darkroom and from fire, we bring together those who create from and within the moment, memory, process, and result of the realities of life, pain, and otherness existing today. Artists Laura Beth Reese and Sascha Mallon’s works depict the worlds we surround ourselves with and the moments within them that determine, interpret, and represent  self-actualized identity and, perhaps, indemnity. While, Felicita Felli Maynard asks questions like: “What constitutes the bounding and unbounded experiences of individuals of the African Diaspora when related to outside [and] the inside?” and “What does it mean to always be searching for home in others versus yourself? What is the balance between all these things, ultimately home is community as well. What are the moments of safety? Where are the moments of violence?” and finally saying, “That push and pull is dynamic”. Other works, like those by Alison Stinely, deal directly with personal mythologies. Together with works by Damaris Swass, Felicita Felli Maynard, and Jovan Speller, Stinely uses and subverts traditional symbolisms and imagery in concert with personal truths.

The exhibition explores the intersection(s) of identity, otherhood, femininity, and institutionalized pain as a means for ‘becoming’. It represents the relationship between fluidity and self-actualized identity in its myriad of forms while also aiming to address the disregard for othered bodies and voices due to unassigned value.  Here the stereotype of the meekness of endured pain is debunked and value is given to the identities, voices, and femineity such pain has informed. The Ripening examines how community is wrought as pain and trauma link us all in the formation of individualized identity as a curatorial premise. The result becomes a necessary heterogeneity and diversity; by a conception of “identity” which lives with and through, not despite, difference, by hybridity.

Featured Artists: Hedwig Brouckaert, Aimee Jones, Sascha Mallon, Felli Maynard, Fumi Nagasaka, Samantha Nye, Kristen Pedote, Laura Beth Reese, Laurel Richardson, Victoria Salzman, Fay Sanders, Jovan C. Speller, Alison Stinley, Jia Sung, Damaris Swass.

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