We Are Still In Eden

January 7th - February 28th, 2022

Featuring the work of Morgan Adler, Anne Canfield, Laura Colomb, Yun-Fei Ji, Nicola López, Laini Nemett, Sarah Roche, Hiro Sakaguchi, Laura Von Rosk, and Virginia Wagner.

Curated by KellyAnn Monaghan

“This landscape exhibition presents artists who depict the full range of the landscape; the beautiful, whimsical, and or disastrous … These artists' works reflect fragility and, at times, demonstrate the insignificance of human life compared to the power and beauty of nature. In the words of Thomas Cole, ‘We are still in Eden; the wall that shuts us out is our own ignorance and folly.’”

— KellyAnn Monaghan

 
 
 

Anne Canfield 
Land of Almost-Awake, 2016.
Oil and graphite on panel.
20 x 20 inches (50.8 x 50.8 cm).

“Loosely narrative, my pieces reveal quiet, solitary moments that are trapped and brought to stand still. While combing an awareness of being, time and place, my works reflect the contemporary human condition as seen through environments that we create, destroy, transform, and inhabit.” - Anne Canfield

 

Hiro Sakaguchi
Bear Fishing.
Acrylic on canvas.
30 x 40 inches (76.2 x 101.6 cm).

 
 

Nicola López
Apparition I, 2019.
Courtesy of The LeRoy neiman Center for Print Studies.
Collagraph on digital print.
21.5 x 31.25 inches (54.61 x 79.375 cm).
Edition of 8.
$2,400 Inquire

 
 

Laini Nemett
Jacal Corner, 2020.
Oil on canvas.
44 x 44 inches (111.76 x 111.76 cm).
$4,000 Inquire

“Using collaged imagery from across cultures and communities, I study how we live, how we protect our shelters, and how we can sometimes be forced to leave. These paintings explore the built environment constructed with, and reclaimed by, the nature surrounding it.”
- Laini Nemett

Read Laini Nemett’s interview here

 

Yun-Fei Ji 
On the High Branches, 2007.
Courtesy of The LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies.
Offset lithograph on Okawara paper.
48.25 x 372.5 inches (122.555 x 93.98 cm).
Edition of 40.
$3,500 Inquire

 
 

Laura Von Rosk
Old Pine, 2020.
Oil on wood panel.
8 x 8 inches (20.32 x 20.32 cm).
$900 Inquire

“These small-scale paintings stem from my love of miniaturization, illusion of space, observation of natural phenomena and a mixing of landscape and natural forms with memory and imagination. Forms are repeated, emphasized, and manipulated to create tension between the imagined and the real world. They may depict an experience of a specific place or situation, and / or be a response to other artworks by other people.” - Laura Von Rosk

 
 
 

Laura Colomb
Solo, 2020.
Oil on canvas.
46 x 5 inches (116.84 x 142.24 cm).
$7,500 Inquire

“I explore the contradictions of land: how we use it, how we think about it's history, and how it is preserved through National and State parks. Through my paintings, I try to connect with the energy of the land itself in order to reflect a whisper of the people and events which came before.” - Laura Colomb

 

Virginia Wagner
The Museum, 2018.
Ink and oil on canvas.
44 x 56 inches (111.76 x 142.24 cm).
$5,000 Inquire

 
 

Hiro Sakaguchi
The Woods.
Acrylic on canvas.
42 x 62 inches (106.68 x 157.48 cm).

“I am interested in making an image which contains a fictional realm that is relevant to my experience as an individual and an artist. I depict images gathered from my every day experience, social concern, interest and memory.” - Hiro Sakaguchi

 

Anne Canfield 
Patiently, From the Window, 2017.
Oil and graphite on panel.
20 x 20 inches (50.8 x 50.8 cm).
$4,200 Inquire

 
 

Laini Nemett
Cliff Dwellers, 2020.
Oil on canvas.
44 x 44 inches (111.76 x 111.76 cm).
$4,000 Inquire
Read Laini Nemett’s interview here

 

Sarah Roche 
Threshold, 2018-2020.
Oil on canvas.
62 x 44 inches (157 x 112 cm).
$5,000 Inquire

 
 

Morgan Adler
Blameless As Daylight, 2021.
Acrylic on plastic paper.
20.5 x 25.5 inches (52.07 x 64.77 cm).

“Intrigued by the stability, metaphor, and potential of a horizon, I paint to question the ability of multiple horizons and the barrier between physical and emotional landscapes. The paintings suggest a memory or event that hasn’t happened yet, refusing to indicate when or where we are.” - Morgan Adler

Read Morgan Adler’s interview here

 
 

Laura Colomb
The Hill, 2020.
Oil on canvas.
54 x 66 inches (137.16 x 167.64 cm)
$9,500 Inquire

 

Virginia Wagner
Vinalhaven, 2018.
Ink and oil on canvas.
44 x 56 inches  (111.76 x 142.24 cm).
$5,000 Inquire

“My work is focused on the conflict between human progress and the natural world. This tension plays out in the paint, as rigid planes contrast swampy pools and violent spills. I begin with poured ink, which is impossible to control, and speaks to storms, natural growth, and decay. I then use oil paint to develop the human structures that work to tame and organize the composition.”
- Virginia Wagner

 
 

Laura Von Rosk
Three Cedars at the Lake⁠, 2021.
Oil on wood panel.
8 x 8 inches (20.32 x 20.32 cm).
$950 Inquire

“Through metaphor, expressive shape, color, and light, I hope to create images that give visual form to physical forces, as well as psychological states of mind, in an expansive landscape in a small format.” - Laura Von Rosk

 

Nicola López
Apparition II,
2019.
Courtesy of The LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies.
Collagraph on digital print.
21.5 x 31.25 inches (54.61 x 79.375 cm).
Edition of 8.
$2,400 Inquire

 
 
 

Sarah Roche 
Dream Garden, 2019-2020.
Oil on wood panel.
44 x 24 inches (117 x 66 cm).
$5,000 Inquire

“Taking different approaches to time and scale, these three paintings revolve around my backyard garden and many of it's inhabitants, both flora and fauna.” - Sarah Roche

 

Morgan Adler
A Place Twice Vanished, 2021.
Acrylic on canvas.
72 x 84 inches (182.88 x 213.36 cm).
Read Morgan Adler’s interview here