Bonnie Lucas - Beautiful Paint
Bonnie Lucas
Beautiful Paint
September 21st — November 2nd, 2024
RUSCHMAN is beyond excited to announce Beautiful Paint, a solo exhibition of brand new paintings by legendary New York artist, Bonnie Lucas.
This exhibition marks Lucas’ second solo exhibition with the gallery, and her first solo presentation of new oil paintings in over two decades.
Where Lucas’ earlier period of paintings from the 1980’s and 90’s have been defined by the sly undermining of image through surrealistic
distortions of storybook fairytale and illustrative conventions, her latest paintings cherry-pick and ransack motifs from decades of her
feminine-feminist prowess, deconstructing floral bouquets, hoop skirts, and cherubic faces down into compositions of intertwining circles,
fleshy deep-red rectangles, and mysterious oblongs. Redolent of her soft white yarn and ephemera collages from the 1970’s, these paintings
further riff on her signature pink-lemonade pistachio-sherbet-green palette she shares with Fragonard, Strawberry Shortcake, and other lively
taste-the-rainbow confections, which has been a key feature of her paintings, drawings, watercolors, collages, assemblages, and plaster moulds.
The errant upside-down dollhouses and everything-including-the-plastic-kitchen-sink nature of her dense previous collage and assemblage works
are here translated into jewel box compositions in oil paint on linen and panel surfaces, maneuvering in, out, and through time. Began in the
early 2000’s, these fruit punch scatologies and ruddy rose madder eschatologies are built up and stripped back down by “a woman’s touch, a
sacred geometry,” as FKA Twigs would call it. In Lucas’ own words, “I like the power I have with a sharp edge.” Layers of oil paint are swathed
on in loose gestures of salt water taffy tints, and aggressive scrubs with a palette knife in the deepest reds the color of macerated petals.
When layers dry, razorblades are used to shear off excess to unearth lurking yellow lemon drops and a magpie’s lair of purple-lavender-cerulean
confetti.
This attention to the dissection and separation of something precious and beautiful, is a loving act harnessed across all aspects of the
artist’s output. As Lucas states in her New York Times interview from July 12, 2020, “…I feel like, by poking and spearing, I’m using [these
tools] in a clever and wonderful way that is very rewarding to me…I think the power, the pleasure, and my feeling of mastery come when I’ve
destroyed these feminine things and I’ve repurposed them in my own way. To make something new that’s mine, that’s whole…I’m yearning to make
a small beautiful universe that’s filled with the reality of the times—which is that things are dismembered and cut up. Because what’s going
on outside is so scary and dark and worrisome, my little universe will reflect all that. But…I can [also] tell a story where there’s some
beauty and some sensuality. It makes me feel alive, it makes me feel sexy, it makes me feel smart. It makes me feel, this is me.”
Surrounding the central dusky red orb in Nine Circles are eight other overlapping discs in artificial forest green scrapes, minty ice cream
scoops, and daubs of pink the color of gum that’s been hitchhiking under your shoe sole, all disintegrating into and out of one another. In
Red Keyhole with Circles, a white backdrop of a square gets muddied with more overlapping circles like dried rings of strawberry smoothie
from an overflowing cup left without a coaster; residue of a saccharine party all pulling the viewer’s gaze toward the central vertical
“keyhole” through which to peer (and leer) at something maybe we’re not supposed to. Some Flowers, The Sun (Clay Pot) coalesces these
bits of visceral geometry into some of the most representative “imagery” in the show, an arrangement of flowers built like moon cups and magic
wands (read also: “magic wands”) being shorn through by bands of coagulated red sun beams.
Bonnie Lucas was born in 1950 in Syracuse, New York. She completed a B.A. in Art History from Wellesley College and an MFA from Rutgers
University. In the decades that have followed, her work has been exhibited throughout the United States (New York, Cambridge, Boston,
Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, Minneapolis, Oakland) and abroad (Netherlands, Finland, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia,
Singapore, Indonesia). In the 1980s, she presented a series of solo exhibitions with the Avenue B Gallery in New York. Her work has been
included in projects at the Drawing Center, the International Studio Curatorial Program, Sideshow Gallery, the Painting Center, Art in General,
the DeCordova Museum, the Dutch Textile Museum, and Bellevue Art Museum among other institutions. In 2011 Lucas was interviewed by MSNBC.com,
and her work has been written about in Artforum, ARTnews, The New York Times, The Village Voice, The New Yorker, and USA Today. In 2014 her
work was the subject of a survey exhibition at Sylvia Wald and Po Kim Gallery, an artist-run space in New York. Following on this extensive
survey, Lucas presented solo exhibitions at JTT in 2017 and 17ESSEX in 2018, and most recently with RUSCHWOMAN in 2022 and ILY2 in 2023.
Lucas lives and works in New York City.
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Some Flowers, The Sun (Blue Vase), 2004—2024,
Oil on wood panel, 20h x 16w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Some Flowers, The Sun (Blue Vase), 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Some Flowers, The Sun (Blue Vase), 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Lacey Circles, 2004—2024,
Oil on linen, 24h x 20w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Lacey Circles, 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Lacey Circles, 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
The Pretty Circles, 2001—2024,
Oil on canvas, 14h x 11w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
The Pretty Circles, 2001—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
The Pretty Circles, 2001—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Red and Green Keyhole, 2004—2024,
Oil on linen, 14h x 11w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Red and Green Keyhole, 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Red and Green Keyhole, 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Some Flowers, The Sun (Clay Pot), 2004—2024,
Oil on wood panel, 16h x 20w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Some Flowers, The Sun (Clay Pot), 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Some Flowers, The Sun (Clay Pot), 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Circles and Rectangles, 2004—2024,
Oil on linen, 12h x 10w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Circles and Rectangles, 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Circles and Rectangles, 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Nine Circles, 2004—2024,
Oil on linen, 20h x 16w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Nine Circles, 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Nine Circles, 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Nature is Amazing, 2004—2024,
Oil on linen, 20h x 16w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Nature is Amazing, 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Nature is Amazing, 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
Red Keyhole with Circles, 2004—2024,
Oil on linen, 14h x 11w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
Red Keyhole with Circles, 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
Red Keyhole with Circles, 2004—2024,
Detail View
Bonnie Lucas,
Beautiful Paint, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas,
These Rings, 2004—2024,
Oil on linen, 14h x 11w in.
Bonnie Lucas,
These Rings, 2004—2024,
Angled View
Bonnie Lucas,
These Rings, 2004—2024,
Detail View