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Gow Langsford Gallery

Gow Langsford Gallery

Exhibitions

Judy Millar

Millar_Untitled_2008_oil and acrylic on canvas_2520x1760mm_web
Millar_Untitled_2008_crylic on fabriano rag paper_1410 x 1020 mm papersize_web
Millar_2009_1500 x1050 mm acrylic oil on canvas
Millar_Untitled_2009_1510 x 1070mm_oil and acrylic on canvas_web
Millar_Untitled_2009_oil and acrylic on canvas_15030 x 1020 mm_web
Millar_Untitled_2009_625 x 875 mm_oil and acrylic on canvas 1_web
Millar_new works 2008-09_installation view
Millar_new works 2008-09_installation view
Millar_new works 2008-09_installation view
Millar_new works 2008-09_installation view
Millar_new works 2008-09_installation view
Millar_new works 2008-09_installation view

11 November 5 December 2009
Preview and book launch: Tuesday 10 November, 5 - 7 pm


Developed alongside her work currently on show in the New Zealand Pavilion at the Venice Biennale, the new work in this exhibition extends Judy Millar's tireless interrogation of the possibilities inherent in the immediacy of painting as an activity and an act of communication in today's world.  Millar will present mechanically-generated enlargements of small handmade gestures that threaten to engulf the viewer alongside smaller oil on canvas paintings that present strangely detached images evoking things known but appearing to unravel. In doing so Millar troubles our expectations of the expressive gesture and indeed of painting itself.

Writing on Millar's Venice exhibition in the recently published Giraffe-Bottle-Gun, Jennifer Gross, curator of Yale University Gallery, states: "Millar brings the viewer back into the realm of the real, into the place they are standing to reckon with painting in the 21st century". In Gross's words "(Millar) taunts our critical and conceptual faculties by immersing us in the large-scale after effects of her studio practice. Her real activity as a painter has been distilled and translated so that we are forced to contend with our experience of its authenticity. Millar wants to dissemble the visitors' safe expectations of painting, and notions of the kind of experience one can have with art. She does not want to be destructive but constructive in this endeavour, she strives to restore her faith and ours."