Darius Kian and Natalie Robinson: Distortions
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The James Black Gallery 144 East 6 Avenue, British Columbia V5T 1J5
Darius Kian and Natalie Robinson, "Distortions," 2021
Distortions, is a painting exhibition that will be on display at the end of Darius Kian and Natalie Robinson’s month-long residency at The James Black Gallery.
In their upcoming works, they will explore a process of sourcing images, heavily manipulating them with digital tools, and then reforming them as oil paintings. Each of their series reflect this transformation from recognizable forms to augmentations that depict a personal reality. Darius and Natalie will present these paintings of their altered realities in an effort to better understand them, and connect with others who feel the same dissatisfaction with their own perspectives.
Natalie’s paintings are direct interventions of the world around her. The architecture inside her pieces are communal, homely, and nostalgic - but the paintings that represent these structures have been obstructed, layered, recolored, processed, pulled, and snipped. As Vancouver maintains its reputation as one of the most expensive and gentrified cities in the world, Natalie uses her art to liquify, puncture, and remove chunks of architecture that presents itself immovable and unobtainable.
Darius’ paintings are confrontations of male dominated spaces. They seek to use queerness as a tool of reclamation and reconstruction of these hypersexual places where the body is scrutinized. Masculine tableaus common in pop culture, like men’s locker rooms, bathhouses, and clubs are loaded with queer subtext, and this implicit queerness is brought to the forefront through use of a garish overly saturated color palette and illusory forms. Darius is hoping to capture the emotional duality of these spaces; for him they are places of anxiety, fear, and repression, that also drip with homoerotic fantasy.