McKenzie Fine Art is pleased to announce an exhibition of paintings and sculpture by Jean Lowe. This is the San Diego-based artist's fourth show at the gallery; it will open on Thursday, February 11th with a reception for the artist from 6 to 8 p.m., and run through Saturday, March 20th, 2010.
For years, Lowe has used humble materials and sly humor to critique the conventions, foibles, neuroses, and injustices of contemporary society. She skillfully crafts individual objects and entire installations from papier-mâché and enamel paint. That which initially appears to be a genuine psychiatrist's office or library full of books is revealed as a cartoonish, very funny, ersatz construction freighted with jabs and cultural references. Her targets have included the obsessive self-help movement, environmental destruction, and the pharmaceutical industry, among many others.
Lowe's current show questions the ubiquitous and powerful effects of consumerism and incessant consumption. The medium- and large-scaled paintings were inspired in part by trips to Germany, Austria, the Czech Republic, France and Switzerland. With a deft painterly hand, Lowe conflates High Baroque palaces and cloistered library interiors with the lowbrow sales floors of big-box stores. The dizzying perspectives of her amalgamated spaces, along with the cultural and temporal clashes, produce both jarring and compelling effects. Especially with the large-scale works in the exhibition, the paintings can be read as imaginary installations by the artist.Videos