Bees and Irridescent Bubbles Infiltrate Still-Life Traditions in Marc Dennis’ Paintings — Colossal

During the Dutch Golden Age, vanitas grew in popularity as a genre of memento mori that emphasized life’s transience. The opulent paintings were steeped in symbolism and foregrounded the futility of ambition and worldly pleasures.

Marc Dennis draws on this 17th-century tradition as he refashions the still life for a contemporary audience. In a recent oil painting, “Happily Ever After,” hordes of honeybees and hornets descend on a lush bouquet. Kaleidoscopic bubbles float across the five-foot canvas, reflecting the surrounding colors and distorting clear viewers of nearby flowers and fruit.

a still life painting of lush pink and yellow flowers with iridescent bubbles and bees surrounding it
“Happily Ever After” (2024), oil on linen, 70.5 x 57.25 inches

The insects and glossy orbs add another layer of impermanence to the already fleeting imagery, while also reflecting on the tenuous relationship between the organic and human-made. Similar tensions appear in “Allegory of the Readymade,” which suffocates and warps a seemingly vibrant painting with thick layers of plastic wrap. Each of the works clings to a brief moment in time, capturing both life at its prime and serving as a bold reminder of its inevitable end.

Dennis’ paintings are on view in I’m Happy You’re Here through March 1 at Harper’s Gallery in New York. Find more from the artist on Instagram.

a still life painting of lush pink and yellow flowers with iridescent bubbles and bees surrounding it
“Based on a True Story” (2024), oil on linen, 70.75 x 55 inches
a detail of a still life painting of lush pink and yellow flowers with iridescent bubbles and bees surrounding it
Detail of “Based on a True Story” (2024), oil on linen, 70.75 x 55 inches
a detail of a still life painting of lush pink and yellow flowers with iridescent bubbles and insects surrounding it
“Superstar” (2024), oil on linen, 70.5 x 55 inches
a detail of a still life painting of lush pink and yellow flowers with iridescent bubbles and bees surrounding it. there's a small, wide eyed furry creature peering out from the center
“Portrait of the Artist as a Juvenile Delinquent” (2024), oil on linen, 72 x 58 inches
a still life painting of pink and yellow flowers that appear wrapped in plastic
“Allegory of the Readymade” (2024), oil on linen, 48.75 x 37 inches
a still life painting of lush pink and yellow flowers with birds and insects nearby
“Giotto’s Fly” (2024), oil on linen, 72.5 x 96 inches
a still life painting of lush pink and yellow flowers
“Dracula” (2024), oil on linen, 71.5 x 56 in




Source link

About WN

Check Also

“Out of the Ordinary: Uncommon Materials, Marks, and Matrices” at Hammer Museum, Los Angeles

This exhibition explores contemporary artists’ use of unusual mark-making devices, including blood, smoke, Kool-Aid, coffee, …

Advertisment ad adsense adlogger