• Installation view of Notes on Stillness
  • Installation view of Notes on Stillness
  • Installation view of Notes on Stillness
  • Bree Jonson, Possibility of an Island / Body Count: 9, 2019, oil on canvas, 165 x 255 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Everything and Nothing (Dead Flower Fields Edition, 2019, oil on canvas, 150 x 200 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Purple Line, 2019, oil on canvas,150 x 200 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Fortunate Circumstance for the Unfortunate, 2019, oil on canvas, 126 x 151 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Coming? Going? Who Knows, 2019, oil on canvas, 122 x 92 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Let Dead Dogs Die (I Hope Not), 2019, oil on canvas, 186 x 251 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Protect Me from What I Want (No. 133 in Perry Index), 2019, oil on canvas, 225 x 165 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Dog in Black, 2019, oil and graphite on canvas, 92 x 61 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Dog in Red, 2019, oil and graphite on canvas, 92 x 61 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Dog in Blue, 2019, oil and graphite on canvas, 92 x 61 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Misportraits, or the Triumph of Narcissism (Ray 1), 2019, oil and gesso on cotton paper, 57 x 56 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Misportraits, or the Triumph of Narcissism (Ray 2), 2019, oil and gesso on cotton paper, 57 x 56 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Misportraits, or the Triumph of Narcissism (Ray 3), 2019, oil and gesso on cotton paper, 57 x 56 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Misportraits, or the Triumph of Narcissism (Ray 4), 2019, oil and gesso on cotton paper, 57 x 56 cm
  • Bree Jonson, Misportraits, or the Triumph of Narcissism (Ray 5), 2019, oil and gesso on cotton paper, 57 x 56 cm
EXHIBITION

Bree Jonson

Notes on Stillness

20 Jul - 18 Aug 2019

Yavuz Gallery is pleased to present Notes on Stillness, Filipino artist Bree Jonson’s first solo exhibition in Singapore.

Based in Manila, Jonson is known for her enigmatic works that convey the complex and darker tendencies present in the human condition through her allegorical paintings of animals in scenes of perpetual motion. Painting realistic dogs, cats, rabbits, wolves and unusual subjects such as sea urchins and anemones, Jonson presents these creatures in various quotidian entanglements that trigger familiar yet bizarre semblance to our own life experiences. By fleshing out primal instincts universal to both, she collapses the divide between animals and humanity, to question and challenge our relationship with nature.

In her latest exhibition, Notes on Stillness, Jonson continues her ruminations and keen observations on the human condition and the natural world. The exhibition brings together a diverse collection of new works that free flow between various topics inspired by the artist’s personal affections, subconscious dreams and intellectual curiosities. Here, many of the animals presented are no longer in a brutal state of maniac flux, and instead appear to be in a moment of suspended rest and contemplation. In the painting Everything and Nothing, a pack of canines drink from a fissure in the ground, its streams washed into a blurred field of overlapping blacks and greens. A lone dog gazes out, stuck in the middle of drift ice in Ice Floes, its hazy scene melding into an half-erased sky of melancholic grey. In many of these new works, landscapes dissipate and devolve into abstraction, horizons and lines breaking and dripping into oblivion. Yet the humanly essence of Jonson’s animal subjects becomes even more acute, more tangible.

As according to the artist, “stillness is ultimately about taking a step back, looking, feeling, absorbing”. For in stillness, we break ourselves away from the flux and distractions of life, and return back to ourselves, our origins, and our shared humanity.