Friday, August 30, 2019

Leah Rainey: Surface Shape, September 6th - 29th, 2019


LEAH RAINEY
SURFACE SHAPE
SEPTEMBER 6TH - 29TH
RECEPTION: FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 6TH, 7-9PM

We are proud to present Surface Shape, Leah Rainey's first solo exhibition at Dianna Witte Gallery. Rainey is a Canadian painter who lives and works in Toronto, Ontario. She studied at Loughborough College of Art and holds a BA Hons in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Art, London. In 2013, Rainey’s work was exhibited at The Power Plant in More Than Two (Let it Make Itself),curated by Micah Lexier, and in 2015 she was included in a juried group show at the Thames Art Gallery (Chatham), curated by Sky Glabush. She has been represented by Dianna Witte Gallery since 2016. 

We invite you to join us for an opening reception on Friday September 6th from 7-9PM.

Leah Rainey’s paintings are visual manifestations of our peripheral vision, like stills of something you see out of the corner of your eye. 
The balance between space and information are imprints of what we unconsciously register. In other words, Rainey captures the uncapturable, translating it into abstract shapes and surfaces that hint at its original source material.
In this recent body of work, Rainey makes paintings of paintings, creating meta-images based in and of paint, rather than reality. Her paintings are made up of fragments of various paintings, evoking a shattered mirror: each piece reflects a different surface, while the canvas itself is its own surface. Just like a mirror, Rainey’s paintings reflect its source material. By referencing small scraps and discarded cast offs of old paintings, while trying to recreate their texture and shape on a larger scale, Rainey distances the final product from the original source, culminating in a faint memory of its origin.


The process-based methods of Rainey’s paintings coalesce in multiple surfaces within one canvas, switching between direct painting to distressed surfaces with ease. The colour within the works are highly saturated, built up through multiple layers, and yet Rainey’s relationship with those colours remains restrained. This communication between limited palettes and nuanced surfaces balance the paintings and creates a sense of harmony. 



Each painting in Surface Shape can be viewed individually, but the repetition of forms throughout the series accumulates into something bigger. A thread weaves throughout the series—visual clues repeat throughout the canvases—connecting the paintings. A visual language emerges. The act of decoding each surface, Rainey’s visual language, and processing a context you don't quite understand becomes an integral part of the work. 



Rainey’s paintings translate the movement of life, and that which is left behind, into a single image; like the out-takes of a silent film contained within a single canvas.










Friday, August 2, 2019

Carolyn Gavin: New Horizons, August 8th - 31st, 2019

GUEST ARTIST: CAROLYN GAVIN
NEW HORIZONS

AUGUST 8TH - 31ST
RECEPTION: FRIDAY AUGUST 9TH, 7-9PM

Dianna Witte Gallery is proud to collaborate with artist and internationally renowned illustrator, Carolyn Gavin, in presenting her first solo gallery exhibition. We invite you to join us for an opening reception this Friday August 9th from 7-9PM.


Gavin’s work taps into a desire for art that brings joy to the viewer. Her canvases are filled with a surplus of colour, scenes from nature, and florals. In short: things that make us happy to look at. Gavin eschews straight, rigid, lines, for organic, flowing, shapes that appeal to the free-spirited viewer. 

Gavin has previously collaborated with the Jane Goodall Institute, Harper Collins Publishing, and the Botanical Garden Centre at Harvard University, and more, to bring her art to a wide audience - accumulating over 360k followers along the way. Gavin’s work is aspirational, neatly corresponding with an ethos of living a life full of confidence and energy. 

Gavin’s abstract landscapes are inspired by her wide travels. “New Horizons,” loosely depicts the landscapes of Guatemala, Belize, and the south of France. Gavin uses neon paint to depict fields of colour—because what other colour could do justice to the saturated hues of a landscape when the sunlight hits midday? Vertical stripes portray vegetation, while geometric shapes represent mountains and trees, creating a psychedelic and dreamlike world. Gavin’s work evokes Jeffrey Harrison abstractions and Vera Neumann’s illustrative florals, while at the same time being distinctly her own. 

Dianna was thrilled when Gavin reached out about hosting her inaugural show - it was a natural pairing. Originally from South Africa, Gavin now lives and works in Toronto. The minimalist, sunlit, space of Dianna Witte Gallery is the perfect venue for Gavin’s brightly pigmented work. 
We are pleased to host this milestone event that will allow a venue for people to experience Gavin’s work in real life.