•  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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  •  Installation views - Out of Focus: Photography
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Current Exhibition
Current Exhibition
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SELECTED WORKS BY Ena Swansea

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Ena Swansea
Big Ocean

2005

Oil and graphite on linen

266.7 x 381cm
In Big Ocean, Ena Swansea’s sublime seascape churns with imposing threat, while her frail figure treads precariously against the rising tide. Working in light against a dark ground, Swansea’s diaphanous surface suggests penetrable and shifting depths beneath her ephemeral forms. Using qualities of painting as a metaphor for psychological tension, Swansea offers vulnerability as a platform for self-knowledge, creating an ease with uncertainty, beauty in the spontaneity of gesture. Within this vast and irresolute field Swansea transfixes space and time, creating an unsettling plane where ominous ambiguity ebbs into tranquillity and solitude.
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Ena Swansea
Theory of Relativity

2004



305 x 198cm
Ena Swansea builds her paintings up in canorous layers, combining the illusive quality of oil paint with the deadened effect of graphite. In Theory of Relativity, Swansea’s process creates an ethereal architecture. Over her dark, smothering base, each brushstroke of white paint is frozen, capturing the energy of its making. Swansea concocts a tenuous anxiety: her gestures vibrate with an unnatural light, infusing this innocuous scene of commuter travel with surreal disorientation. Dwarfed in the engulfing train carriage, Swansea’s figure is both victim and manipulator, her environment aggrandised in the hyperawareness of her own fragility.
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Ena Swansea
Agent

2004



244 x 152cm
Reminiscent of Impressionist paintings, Ena Swansea’s Agent invokes a timeless sentiment. Working against a blackened ground, Swansea uses paint in the negative process of pastel drawing. Painting from memory rather than photographs, Swansea conjures her image from a subliminal void. Instead of solidifying form, her colours replicate light itself: shimmering highlights and reflections of surfaces refract from objects not physically rendered. Through this romanticised suggestion, Swansea’s figure lingers with ghost-like presence, her Arcadian charm elucidating from what isn’t there.
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Ena Swansea
Shadow and Reflection

2005

2005, Oil and graphite on canvas

279 x 203cm
Ena Swansea’s Shadow and Reflection contains a duplicitous, otherworldly quality. Swansea captures the nuance of dreamy environment with impressionistic fervour: the watery ground churns with underlying graphite texture, descending into a scratchy ambiguous mist. An oil-spill glare of coloured light becomes a consuming fixation. Spellbound, it holds her figure in mystical sway: impossibly showing presence, reflection, and ominous shadow as fractured sense of self; a sublime landscape of inner contemplation.
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Ena Swansea
World Headquarters

2005



244 x 152cm
In World Headquarters, Ena Swansea wittily depicts the seat of power as an order of feminine calm: a languishing fantasy of lifestyle image cum pink-phoned gossip centre. Swansea’s dark hues inject the scene with a half-serious gravitas; her idyll daydream a source of empowerment and innuendo. Within the seductive black abyss, Swansea renders an abstracted reflection as both portrait and vagina. Alluding to the sexual nature of the subconscious, Swansea emulates the workings of psychological motivation through her fluid painting style: her hurried brushwork constantly shifting in a current of flux of meandering desires.
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Ena Swansea
Gay Wedding

2004



244 x 183cm
In Ena Swansea’s Gay Wedding, the artist draws unexpected narrative from painterly abstraction. Playing light against dark, Swansea’s forms billow and writhe with delicate fancy: fairytale ‘goddesses’ of chastity, unblemished in their virginal gowns. Enshrined in silvery celebration, Swansea’s scene is contorted with a certain stiffness: staged like actors in a play, the figures’ choreographed position carries underlying significance. Redolent of Paula Rego’s scenes of contemporary mythology, Swansea’s monumental burlesque brides convey tumultuous undertones: demur beneath their flouncy parasol, wristwatch hidden behind a back, Swansea portrays glorified romance as a folly of seduction.
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Ena Swansea
Portal

2003



152 x 183cm
The subject of Ena Swansea’s paintings is found as much in her technique as in her depicted images. In Portal, she exploits the malleability of paint as a means to embody a filmic drama: beneath the varying thickness of her oily brushwork is an entrancing undertow of emotional hesitancy. Formulaic elements of fiction are constructed with painterly sophistication. The elongated composition, and juxtaposition of overpowering shadow to a withering, distant supernal light, draws the heroine into a sinister destiny: placing the viewer in the position of prime suspect.
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Ena Swansea
World Wide Web

2004



198 x 305cm
The magic of Ena Swansea’s paintings resides in her use of rich materials to create resounding psychological environments. Working in oil paint over a graphite ground, Swansea allows the unpredictable qualities of her media to clash with a physical tension. In World Wide Web, her silver-black surface has a metallic and dusty sheen, the uniquely gritty and greasy texture of the graphite both refracting and consuming light. Masked by breezy layers of oil paint, figures emerge as ghost-like contours, suspended in dream-space. World Wide Web captures a refracted sense of time and space, where frail figures inhabit a world that is treacherously emotive and unstable.

ARTICLES

ENA SWANSEA
about the artist|

Articles about Ena Swansea

Ena Swansea
By DEBORAH GARWOOD from artcritical the online magazine for art and ideas

Ena Swansea achieved recognition in 1998-99 for a series of abstract paintings based on observations of lightfall in the landscape. Key to this work was a subtly colorized grisaille palette and layers of transparent paint. The restless gray forms suggested moving shadows and were widely appreciated for their ingenious equation of style and content. Critical response noted that a subtle but recurring theme in the history of painting had resurfaced in a smart new way.

Swansea's debut exhibition at Klemens Gasser Tanja Grunert currently on view through May 3, 2003 features paintings dating from 1999 - 2003. Introducing figuration and text, it reconfigures Swansea's repertoire of formal and stylistic elements. Surfaces vary from translucence to opacity or blinding shine on dark grounds; same goes for a few planes of lead-based white. Several of the most optically unconventional paintings start with graphite grounds that subvert color and squelch light altogether. They would seem to spring from unimaginable motives if not for Swansea's known interest in the painterly paradox shadows represent (as the relative absence of light and color). Formats vary, but at medium to large size (88" x 108" the largest) most canvases project an ambitious physicality in the gallery's skylit space.
Read the entire article Source: (www.artcritical.com)

Ena Swansea at Gasser & Grunert
New York - exhibition of the artist's work

Art in America, Jan, 2004 by Melissa Kuntz

Ena Swansea's earlier paintings, shown at Robert Miller in the late 1990s, were, for the most part, delicate abstracted renderings of the effects of light in the landscape; many suggest intricate shadows created by twisted branches and clumps of leaves. In this recent exhibition, only one similarly themed work was shown, titled 4th Marriage 3. The remaining canvases were romanticized figural images, rendered in soft focus. Despite this sudden shift, Swansea effortlessly glides from one approach to the next. All her paintings, regardless of topic, share a very specific esthetic based on her signature technique and unique sensibility.

In the figure paintings at Klemens Gasser & Tanja Grunert, beautiful young women painted in a rather illustrational style are shown interacting in intimate ways with young men. The sensuality and sweetness of the relationships are enhanced by the sensitivity of the paint application. Large, fluid brushstrokes with edges that often bleed into the background give the paintings a fleeting, even dreamlike quality. For example, Undecided (38 by 90 inches) presents a couple engaged in conversation. The woman, posed behind the man, wears an enigmatic expression; since only the shoulders and the back of the man's head are visible, the narrative is left open. Faint daubs of paint, suggestive of blowing leaves, seem to hover around them, and a series of black lines "connecting" them charge the space. One of the strongest works in the exhibition, Tinyman (1999-2003), depicts a woman peering lovingly down at a man's face. Her hair is rendered with an economy of marks, using only a few wet-into-wet brushstrokes; the pinky-peach-colored water and backdrop are intensely fleshy. Both figures seem to be in water and the scene is rather sexual. Read the entire article Source: (www.looksmarttrends.com)