
Monique Meloche
is pleased to announce teh long awaited return of Christopher Patch!
Christopher Patch
Matinicus
Oct 19
- Nov 24, 2007
opening reception for the artist Friday Oct 19 from 6-9pm
moniquemeloche
118 N. Peoria
Chicago, IL 60607
312.455.0299
www.moniquemeloche.com
hours Tues-Sat 11am-6pm
“I have done a number of pictures
this summer which have not arrived in my mind from direct impressions
but are creations of fancy arising out of my knowledge and experience
of the facts employed. The result, while in continual danger of becoming
either illustration in a bad sense or melodrama, has nevertheless evolved
into very rare pictures.” George Bellows describing his trip
to Matinicus Island in a letter to Robert Henri 1916
American painting has a long historical and aesthetic relationship to
the landscape. This relationship often viewed as romantic has developed
our idea of the natural landscape both as a cultural artifact in painting,
but also as a philosophical construction of nature. In the 20th century
such painters as George Bellows, Marsden Hartley, Fairfield Porter and
Alex Katz explored this heritage as a way of creating an American identity.
Mantinicus Island off the coast of Maine was specifically attractive to
artists because of the hard working local fisherman and the “unspoiled
corner of rustic America” that was still intact in contrast to the
industrialization of modern America. Naturally this was a perfect place
to react and respond to the landscape with a direct eye.
For his second solo-exhibition at Monique
Meloche Gallery, the New York based artist and Maine native Christopher
Patch, boarded a single engine Cessna aircraft, with his paints and the
hope of re-capturing some inspiration of the exiled island of Matinicus.
After one week of walking and making observational en plein air studies
it was revealed that behind the typified American mirage, exists a more
complex place. The island has gained a hostile reputation for it’s
violent behavior between rivaling lobstermen, and it’s aggressive
attitudes toward non-residents. With an alarming rise of guns, drugs and
all-terrain vehicles, Matinicus is a microcosm of contemporary rural culture.
The island’s picturesque beauty, thoughstill intact, serves as a
backdrop for interpersonal struggle and severe isolation..
Influenced by this time spent on the Island,
Patch went back to his studio in New York and created a series of new
images of Matinicus. The artist has crafted paintings that are at once
visual documentations but are also intense formally inventive works that
are expanding his uncanny ability for detail. While putting this observable
natural landscape through a lens of wobbly graphic drawing and an exquisite
painterly touch, Patch has created highly ambitious pictorial conundrums.
In the studio he works in a refreshing dialogue with representational
painting in a continuum as far reaching as the Transcendental Landscape
Painters of the 19th century to Robert Crumb.
Christopher Patch (b. Maine 1974, lives Brooklyn) had
his 1st solo exhibition at moniquemeloche gallery in 2003. Since that
time he relocated from Chicago to Brooklyn and has exhibited in group
shows at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Contemporary Vancouver
Art Gallery, Portland Museum of Art, New York Institute of Technology,
Bronx Museum of Art, and Centre for Maine Contemporary Art. His work is
included in the traveling exhibition Poets on Painters organized by the
Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita Kansas with a full-color catalogue including
artists Mequitta Ahuja, Abel Auer, Jules de Balincourt, Nina Bovasso,
Echo Eggebrecht, James Benjamin Franklin, Joanne Greenbaum, Mark Grotjahn,
Angelina Gualdoni, Laura Owens, Christopher Patch, Lamar Peterson, Sam
Prekop, Monique Prieto, Christoph Ruchaberle, Anna Schachte, Dana Schutz,
Sandra Scolnik, Amy Sillman, and Whiting Tennis. Additional venues include
Herron Galleries, Herron School of Art and Design, Indianapolis, IN; University
Galleries, Illinois State University, Normal IL; Queens Library Gallery,
Jamaica NY; Sheldon Memorial Art Gallery, Lincoln ME. Patch received his
BFA from Maine College of Art in 1997 and his MFA from The School of the
Art Institute of Chicago 2000.
For further information please contact
Whitney Tassie or Jenny Shedor at
312.455.0299 or info@moniquemeloche.com
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Downtown, 2007 Acrylic on
canvas, 40 x 60 inches

project room installation view featuring:
Wild Turkeys, 2007 Acylic on panel, 11x14 in.
Artist's Self, 2007 Watercolor, gouache, paper, archival
glue, 47x27x12 in.
Old Logging Road, 2007 Acylic on panel, 16x20 in.
Still Life, 2007 Paper, archival glue, 28x24x6 in.

studies for Matinicus, 2007
all works acrylic on panel, approx dims 9x12 in.
for more
images of Patch's work, click here
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