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Marion Peck
“Ladies & Clowns”

Exhibition: May 13 through June 13, 2009
Reception: Wednesday, May 13th, 7 to 9 pm
Sloan Fine Art is
pleased to present “Ladies & Clowns,” new paintings and
video by Marion Peck.
With references ranging from Pieter Bruegel and Roland de la Porte to
Holly Hobbie and paint-by-numbers, Marion Peck mines the depths of art
history, popular culture and the human experience for her meticulous narratives.
In “Ladies & Clowns” Peck utilizes these sources to alternately
honor and challenge archetypes of beauty, femininity, serenity and joy.
In “Fuck You,” a nod to François Gérard’s
1804 “Portrait de Mme Tallien,” an elegant royal is anything
but, as she tells us how she really feels. In a series of solemn clown
portraits we are reminded that the sad clown is often just that. And while
peasants dance in a painting of the same name, their son leers at a corralled
ass while the evening’s dinner runs around with its head cut off.
Sometimes referred to as a contemporary surrealist because of her propensity
to incorporate dream imagery into her work, with “Ladies & Clowns”
Peck looks beyond the subconscious, reminding us that the waking world
is never quite as it seems. And with her dark sense of humor and irrepressible
optimism, she assures us that while life can be ominous, tragic, even
deceptive, it is also beautiful, magical and alive with hope.
Marion Peck earned her BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. Her
work has been exhibited in Los Angeles, San Francisco, Seattle, Paris,
Rome, and Turin. Born in The Philippines while her family was on a trip
around the world, she lived in Rome and Seattle before settling in Eagle
Rock, California. This is Marion Peck’s first solo exhibition in
New York.
Image Left: “Peasant Dance,” 2008, oil on canvas, 36 x 46
inches
Image Right: “Fuck You,” 2008, oil on canvas, 32 x 26 inches
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