If The Moon Turns Green
September 7 - October 12, 2019

Lowell Ryan Projects

3_Erin Trefry, If The Moon Turns Green, Installation Views_Lowell Ryan Projects_Med_300dpi.jpg

Lowell Ryan Projects is pleased to present If The Moon Turns Green, a solo exhibition by Los Angeles-based artist Erin Trefry. The show will feature a series of new works—some on canvas, others wall-hanging sculptures—that are composed of various materials including oil paint, ceramics, and sartorial objects such as clothing, shoes, and handbags. 


As a kind of personal archaeology, her latest works use materials from family: her father's sweatshirt, her mother's purse handles, her grandmother's shoes, and drawer pulls from the family's home. Deconstructed wicker, acrylic and leather fragments are knotted together with zip ties to metallic ceramic pieces. The symmetrical crustacean-like forms look flayed or dissected, mask-like or pelvic. About the size of an armored breastplate, each work has a spine. Some of the assemblages sit on panels of stretched fabric and some directly on the wall. Some works are bound with rope or have braided lengths falling from their surfaces. Meant to make us think about our human form, they reference the body's interior and exterior with skin and bone concealed and strategically revealed.

Trefry has recently started to incorporate ceramic pieces alongside found objects. Using such an array of materials from synthetic to earthly is an elemental aspect of her process. The artist uses clay alongside pleather and denim to perform a kind of alchemy, transforming earth, air, fire and water into artworks with poetic meaning.

In one work, Impermanent time that weeps, 2018, a piece of green leather rests on a tall panel of dark denim. At the center, two circular wicker handles frame a dark flowering ceramic form. Like all of Trefry's work, the piece feels devotional and shamanistic—utilizing charged materials in combinations to form something new and universal. The artist uses imagery of our bodies, and objects from our lives to address our own humanity and mortality. Remains are transmuted into new life.
 


The exhibition's title, If The Moon Turns Green, is from a Sonny Stitt record that was given to the artist by her father, another family heirloom.