1998
American
Oil on linen
Overall: 80 × 62 5/8 in. (203.2 × 159.07 cm)
2013.705
Not on view

It’s not that I don’t believe in the principle of unity, quite the contrary. I just don’t believe in the presence of a harmonious unity where the parts become sacrificed for the sake of it. –Shirley Kaneda

Kaneda’s paintings address philosophical and social concepts of individuality, hybridity, and uncertainty, which refer as much to human relationships as to the rapidly changing status of images in the late 20th century. Her montage-like paintings position fragments of found and invented colors, shapes, and patterns in condensed and shifting spaces. The forms abut precariously, their artifice enhanced by sharp colors. The language of abstraction recalls New York School painting of the 1950s, but here presented as an impure subversion of that heroic modernism that might be termed a “disloyal devotion.”

Gift of Jean Crutchfield and Robert Hobbs
Shirley Kaneda: Peintures, 1998-1999, Centre d'Art d'Ivry-sur-Seine, Ivry-sur-Seine, France; Galerie Evelyne Canus, Paris; La Colle-sur-Loups; Centre Regional d'Art Contemporaries de Sete, Sete, France, 2000

Shirley Kaneda: New Paintings, Feigen Contemporary, New York, NY, 1998
Collection of Jean Crutchfield and Robert Hobbs, Richmond, VA; Gift to Virginia Museum of Fine Arts (VMFA), Richmond, Virginia in 2013.
© Shirley Kandeda

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