© Graham Parks

swallows day, 2004
acrylic on wood panel, 16 1/2 x 19 inches


Graham Parks


Graham Parks' reductive paintings of treetops and wooded walkways hover between representation and abstraction. Silhouetted leaves and arching branches, as well as the spaces in-between, become fragments in picture puzzles that disappear when close and coalesce from afar. The patterns of light and shadow help denote a place and define a space; yet remain on the surface as distinctive identities of their own. For all their visual activity, Parks' paintings remain surprisingly serene.


Beginning with photographs of places Parks has been, from Spokane to Kyoto, he polarizes and simplifies the images to their sparest essentials. He meticulously masks and isolates each shape and paints them and the surrounding space with an even clarity, at times using blended gradations to reference atmosphere, similar to Japanese prints and watercolors. From vibrant reds and pinks to poetic pastels, or from black and white to dark on dark, Parks' paintings may be of the dawn or dusk in his clean edged world of formal resolve and contemplative reverie.


Graham Parks lives in New York City, and has exhibited in galleries throughout the United States and abroad.


Exhibition: January 6 - February 19, 2005
Gallery hours: Tue-Sat 11 am - 6 pm


Feigen Contemporary
Front Gallery
535 West 20th Street
USA-New York, NY 10011
Telephone +1 212 929.0500
Fax +1 212 929.0065
Email Gallery@FeigenContemporary.com

www.feigencontemporary.com