Night Gallery is pleased to present Iva Gueorguieva: Seascapes, Snowscapes, Kukeri. This is Gueorguieva’s first solo exhibition with the gallery.
Gueorguieva paints the space between softness and resilience, layering materials and pigments with mark making that agitates the senses against contemporary atrophy. Her work is generous yet insistent that the viewer slow down and really engage with her dimensionality, tactility and materiality to experience the land and seascapes and the mythical creatures – kukeri*, Madonnas, apocalyptic horses – as well as elephants and other animals that are more than mirrors to human subjectivity. These inhabited presences are revealed and concealed through veils of gestures and abstractions.
Hauntings, warnings, secrets and dreams emerge in Gueorguieva’s painting, separated and joined together with gauze, thread, luminosity and density. She rejected the confines of the canon a long time ago to wholly embody her relationship with what lies between the cosmic and the organic, between the moon and the bottom of the ocean. Her work brings into proximity the knowledge that what is above is also below, that surface like true north is an illusion. Feeling is her compass, dissonance the canvas and memory the hand that unfixes our need for temporality.
These transmutations evidence a master storyteller and channeler of collective sensorial registries, codices, and lexicons. While Gueorguieva is influenced by the conceptual and historical frameworks of Lee Krasner’s forceful collaging, Lucio Fontana’s anti-imperialist counternarratives and Miro’s antipaintings, she sees Dona Nelson and Thornton Dial as spirit guides to her dance with other worlds. Nelson and Dial represent the spectrum on which Gueorguieva finds not balance, but buoyancy, allowing her to explore what it means to unearth narratives and feelings that transmogrify the canvas from gestures and colors to invitations and refusals.