Jane Irish Locks Gallery

La Malouiniere de la Chipaudiere, 2014
egg tempera on linen
24 x 47 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Faience, 2015
low fire earthenware, china paint, lustre and underglaze
8 x 20 x 20 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Museo di Casa Martelli, 2013
gouache on Tyvek
24 x 21 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Pink Bowl Pattern Book Leaf, 2014
chalk gesso, egg tempera, gouache on paper
22 x 30 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Il Salone Delle Feste, Museo Stibbert, 2013
gouache on Tyvek
18 x 24 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Upside Down Lyndon Johnson Upside Down Pattern Book Leaf, Interior, 2014
chalk gesso, egg tempera, gouache on paper
22 x 30 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Corsini Garden, 2013
gouache on Tyvek
24 x 26 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Corsini Garden from Loggia, 2013
gouache on Tyvek
16 x 21 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Via di Santo Spirito Salon Firenze, 2013
gouache on Tyvek
16 3/4 x 21 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Piazza della Santissima Annunziata, 2013
gouache on Tyvek
14 x 19 inches

Jane Irish Locks Gallery

Museo Stefano Bardini, 2013
gouache on Tyvek
18 x 24 inches

Press Release

Locks Gallery is pleased to present Faience & Firenze, a solo exhibition of new ceramics and recent gouache paintings by Jane Irish. A reception for the artist will be held on March 6, 2015 from 5:30 to 7:30 pm.

Irish’s 2014/15 ceramic vessels are a new shape for the artist: a wide mouth vase of the artist’s own creation. While taking inspiration from Asian designs, they also mimic a cirque (an amphitheater-like mountain valley). Continuing her interest in the legacy of the Vietnam war, this shape is symbolic of the conflict-ridden landscape of Vietnam, and the natural amphitheater settings in which the American anti-war protest movement chose to rally and march.

Her painted glazes combine imagery from the Vietnamese landscape, architecture, the war, and American politics, alongside a combination of decorative art motifs which are a continual source of study for Irish. “Faience” is a French word for Italian opaque-painted earthenware, which has become a globally adopted term, comprising ceramic traditions from Egypt to Vietnam.

As part of her artistic research, Irish travels to study decorative art and art historically rich interiors around the world. Galvanized by a (now infamous) 2004 essay in the Village Voice by Jerry Saltz, Irish stopped working from photographs for her paintings nearly 10 years ago. Now working in gouache, she has returned to her formal training working en plain air, visiting sites to make energetic works in inspired color palettes.

While planning for her more political works, Irish continues to paint romantic and opulent domestic interiors. Taking cues from anthropology, Irish states, “I like to study up, not study down,” making wealth and the architecture of power a specimen to be studied. Irish asks us to consider the rise of nationalism after “failed” wars and cultural amnesia towards colonial histories through her examination of the decorative arts.

After many years of studying French design, Irish has shifted her gaze to Italy, a land she describes as “foreign territory” but an important “return to the source of painting.” In 2013, Irish visited Florence (Firenze) at the invitation of writer and curator Carl Brandon Strehlke to study the Medici palaces, palazzos, baroque interiors, and lavish sculpture gardens. Irish has previously exhibited landscape paintings from Vietnam but this is the first time her garden paintings will be exhibited at the gallery.

On view are two vases, one created in 2008 and the other an updated version created in 2015. On the 2008 version, Jane Irish includes a poem written by Thomas Devaney. This collaboration is of Irish’s many collaborations with art historians, writers and poets. After the vase was created, Devaney wrote a revised version of his “War Vase,” in order to further continue this dialogue with the artist. In turn, Irish created a new vase, this time including the newer iteration of the poem. Both pieces will be seen on view side by side, along with her engaging preparatory sketches for new ceramic pieces.

Faience & Firenze asks viewers to shift their gaze: as they move from the interior and the exterior of her ceramic vessels, from the inside to the outside of the sites she explored in Florence, and within and distanced from our own global histories.

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