• Cris Brodahl
  • lightyears
  • The Approach
  • 18.02—27.03.16

The Approach is pleased to present lightyears, an exhibition of new works combining painting and sculptural constructions by Belgian artist Cris Brodahl. Continuing to develop her interest in configurations of fractured beauty that carry undertones of sexuality, the subconscious, love, death and the uncanny, Brodahl presents a series of vibrantly coloured portraits of anonymous

female subjects, inspired by commercial photography from a bygone era.

The surfaces of these skillfully rendered paintings become three-dimensional in appearance through the use of trompe-l’oeil, emulating the collaged layering in which the paintings’ origins lie. Worked for the first time onto sharply angular shaped grounds, some wall mounted and some freestanding with intricate white wooden backings, the paintings offer a new approach to traditional portrait painting with an acknowledgment to genres such as cubism and photorealism. Interlocking and fragmented painterly planes are constructed by Brodahl with masterly precision. Throughout lightyears, the sitter’s hair, jewellery and facial features are central to the compositions, alluding to traditional portraiture, where clothing and accessories would provide clues to the sitter’s standing in society, but also to modern commercial imagery, where gender often becomes the site of objectification.

While Brodahl continues to explore the hauntological; ideas of the past and the future, bleeding into the paintings’ present, she now brings this thematic concern to experiments in three-dimensional form. Where her paintings often veer between Surrealism and Symbolism, photography and painting, these new works also explore the limits of form and structure. The duality of portraiture on the front of the relief and the modernist geometric constructions behind create a recto/verso effect; the backs of the paintings, the otherwise invisible, are given equal aesthetic consideration here.

This duality creates a temporal confusion: times of past and present are placed back to back, as structural supports holding one another up. The title lightyears alludes to a notion of timelessness and distance, which can be detected in this body of work. Where the front echoes conventional historical portraiture and boasts a subtle luminosity of colour akin to pre-Raphaelite painting, the reverse makes association to twentieth century modernist architecture. The strength of the works lies in their ability to seek beauty not just from the surface and within, but also from the reverse, and through doing so marks an arresting new direction for Brodahl.