January 16, 2025
Cynthia Daignault
The Lemon
Night Gallery
October 26, 2024 - January 18, 2025
Cynthia Daignault
In Elegy, her first exhibition at Night Gallery, Cynthia Daignault presented black and white paintings that explored environmental collapse. Each painting was the same height and installed to form a narrative across the gallery about the passage of time and the timelessness of the painted image. Rendered in black and white, the works also suggested a relationship between beauty and loss. In her second exhibition, The Lemon, she explores similar themes but from a completely different perspective.
The Lemon takes its name from Edouard Manet's painting Le Citron (1880), an ornately framed, small scale hyper-realistic painting of a lemon in the collection of the Musée d'Orsay in Paris. Daignault's painting reproduces Manet's work, as well as its frame, but rather than create a like sized piece, she centers her image on a much larger white canvas. This piece is exhibited alongside other impressionist paintings as both an homage and a critique of the genre and its occasional misogyny. Daignault is a facile painter who is as comfortable with realism as she is with abstraction. In this exhibition, she offers new interpretations of iconic paintings by Manet, Pissarro and Cézanne among others. In The Details (all works 2024), she selects and re-presents fragments of the originals. In the painting entitled The Book, she reproduces pages from an art history text that depicts images by Pissarro and Cézanne. The three paintings from the series Stable Diffusion, reveal two women lounging on the grass in varying degrees of detail. And for The Luncheon, she obscures Manet's masterpiece with wide, Gerhard Richter-like fields of scraped paint.
For the giant painting The Collection Daignault creates a large grid with painted reproductions in various sizes of works spanning numerous genres and timeframes. Included are iconic paintings by Guston, Mondrian, Matisse, Rothko, Warhol, O'Keeffe, Vermeer, Van Gogh and Caravaggio. They are evenly spaced and aligned as if a treasured postcard collection of favorite paintings— images that one wants to savor and remember. On an adjacent wall, Daignault installs The Details. In this ten-part work, she breaks down Manet's painting A Bar at the Folies-Bérgere (1882) into fragments. Different aspects of the painting are presented as small rectangles, each more expressionistically rendered than Manet's original.
Throughout the history of art, artists have borrowed, copied and appropriated aspects of others' work— modifying, erasing and even reproducing pieces verbatim. This list is long and includes a variety of approaches as well as mediums ranging from photographs and paintings to sculpture. While some artists use works from the past to offer critiques or to challenge ideas of originality or to transform the male gaze, Daignault wants to connect to the past and celebrates painters she admires. She states that the exhibition is "an attempt to understand the weight of influence. Of history. Of love." For this exhibition, she studied Impressionism and the world of Manet. Rather than create new works based on her surroundings, she remade his paintings as a way to understand, not only how he applied paint to the canvas, but also his motivations and where he positioned himself in his world. How his work and his world transfer to the now is at the core of Daignault's explorations.
Click here for Cynthia Daignault on its own page.