16
29 October – 7 December 2002
Essenhigh's large scale paintings create an
enigmatic world in which animated action figures are cast alongside
mythological characters and the demimonde in roles where time-honoured
human concerns such as patriotism, religion, competitiveness and
heroism are played out in futuristic landscapes. Her paintings often
include the presence of scarcely individualized figures, hybrids
existing somewhere between their bodies and their surroundings,
inhabiting ordinary life situations and pursuing the promise of beauty
and pleasure - shopping, going to the gym, getting a tan. Essenhigh's
work is reflective of her ability to unite divergent influences,
including Romanesque murals, the graphic stylised qualities of Art
Nouveau, the iconography of Italian Renaissance painting and the
aesthetic sensibilities of Japanese Ukiyo-e prints whilst at the same
time reconstructing her own contemporary mythologies. "I paint people doing things. People in my paintings are defined by what they do. Shoppers shop. Dancers dance. Birds fly. Victims scream. People are barely individualized beyond their own actions. The way they scream or fly or dance is shown by abstracting their bodies into gestures commonly used in cartooning. Perspectival space is distorted into flat space and sometimes both are used in the same picture. The lack of specific background is meant to imply that the actions may be going on indefinitely. I don't paint about right and wrong; the inhabitants of my paintings just do what they do."
Inka Essenhigh, August 2002
In an interview two years ago, Essenhigh spoke of her paintings as having a "lot of Walt Disney about them" suggesting Mattel plastic toys or animations, rather than fleshy beings. The stylised, humanoid characters in her paintings at that time were intended to look "fake, plasticy and man-made", while also being "elegant. I think of them as being about America: fake, fun, pop, violent, but also quite attractive". However the newer oil based paintings have extended her subject matter, denying the hard flat surfaces of the earlier paintings and investing them with more of a three dimensional quailty.
