Karen
Kilimnik’s (b. 1955, Philadelphia) debut exhibition with Gladstone Gallery
opens January 16 in New York, featuring the artist’s radical, fantasy
compositions of tropical beaches, coastal landscapes and floral forests. The
exhibition brings together 17 of the artist’s paintings created
between 2008 and 2024.
Kilimnik’s
paintings meld Raoul Dufy’s lively and luminous paintings of seaside vistas and
regattas with the seductive allure of travel brochures and Biggles English
adventure stories.
In one of
the glittering seascapes there is the strange sight of Sopwith camels circling
above while submarines lurk offshore. Proving not only that this place never
did and never will exist, but also that these paintings are spells that form a
kind of magic.
Representing
a kind of nomadism of the mind, the places Kilimnik depicts— including
“kaleidoscopic gardens” and verdant views of the English countryside—offer
respite, and diversion. Ultimately, in one way these are also partly protest
paintings — representatives of many people’s dislike and unappreciation of the
Orwellian past 5 years of censorship, propaganda and lack of freedom of speech
and assembly, freedom of movement, and bodily autonomy.