Sarah Kogan: Warp includes a selection of paintings that reflect the artist’s interest in mythology, cartography and personal memory. Employing masterfully controlled pouring techniques and gestures, Kogan creates multi-layered and delicately contoured compositions that offer meditative explorations of the materiality of paint. The gallery will be showing four paintings from Kogan’s new Medusa series.
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Working in stages in her London studio, Sarah Kogan applies paint that she then scrapes away or paints over, leaving traces of its existence or memory, a process she likens to leaving her ‘fingerprints’ behind. Often comprised of multiple layers in varying degrees of opacity, each composition exists within the outline of an amorphous shape set against a pale background, highlighting the surface variations. Kogan’s method of controlling and manipulating the materiality of paint creates shapes-within-shapes comprised of controlled spills, stains and solid pools of colour. The result of this deliberate entanglement instills the paintings with a condensed visceral energy that appears to circulate within it.
Included in this exhibition is a new series of works entitled Medusa (i–iv) (2022). Although abstract by nature, these paintings call to mind multiple tubular forms that have been dropped or slipped into the top edge of the canvas and loop indiscriminately back upwards as if they were attached to an unknown, greater mass. Kogan is interested in this notion, that we are only seeing a section of matter without knowing what it is attached to, if anything, encouraging a feeling of unease. Created by wide brush marks in jewel-like dark blue tones, these arrangements of sinuous forms, translucent in places, describe swirling lines that recur throughout the paintings to varying degrees of density.
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Sarah KoganMedusa (i), 2022Acrylic on canvas120 x 90 cm | 47 1/4 x 35 3/8 in
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Sarah KoganMedusa (ii), 2022Acrylic on canvas120 x 100 | 47 1/4 x 39 3/8 in
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Sarah KoganMedusa (iii), 2022Acrylic on canvas120 x 100 cm | 47 1/4 x 39 3/8 in
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Sarah KoganMedusa (iv), 2022Acrylic on canvas120 x 90 cm | 47 1/4 x 35 3/8 in
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I think I am always trying to define space by bending or warping the paint. Getting it to defy gravity and become part of my psyche. Not as an expressive tool to illustrate throught or feeling, but as a seamless extenstion of me.
Sarah Kogan
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Like her earlier works, Freefall, Nebula (2019) and The Gordian Knot, (2020) the complexity Kogan achieves by adding and subtracting paint is both disarming and deeply personal, allowing the viewer a glimpse at the emotional response within the artist’s process. Yet there is a lightness to these painted ribbons and loops that fluctuate between foreground and background with a fluid sense of continual motion, caught and held like a snapshot that could at any time alter in shape or position.
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About Sarah Kogan
Sarah Kogan is a British artist based in London. She is a trustee of APT Gallery and Studios. Recent exhibitions include: Sarah Kogan: Take me to the Light, Karsten Schubert London (online, 2021); Sarah Kogan: From the Corner of my Eye, Karsten Schubert London (online, 2020); and Miniscule Venice (58th Venice Biennale, 2019). Recent curatorial projects include Supernova (Blyth Gallery, Imperial College London) and Space Shift (APT Gallery, London). From 2016–18 Kogan's multimedia First World War art installation Changing the Landscape was supported by public funding from The National Lottery through Arts Council of England and exhibited in four international and national venues including: Museo d'Arte Contemporanea di Cogliandrino, Italy; The National Archives, UK; Atrium Gallery, London School of Economics and and Manchester Central Library. Sarah Kogan has been a guest lecturer at Chelsea College of Arts, The Estorick Collection and on the ground-breaking 'Art of Psychiatry' module at Bethlem Royal Hospital.