Recent Exhibit
The Transformation of Junk
March 16 - April 7, 2001

 

Priscilla Day

British Artist Priscilla Day paints on found objects, imparting new life to cast-off material. By turns whimsical, poetic, and savvy, and wholly captivating and original.

Day is a true original. Yet her work is anything but "naïve." Beautifully executed, usually in exquisitely modulated glazes of oil paint, and sealed with yacht varnish, Day's painted objects are often rich in sophisticated literary allusions, some of them quite mysterious:

"Being dyslexic, I think in pictures rather than in words, and I can always 'see' instantly what I want to draw before I draw it. But, ironically, I can really only draw with words to guide me. I first decided I wanted to be a book illustrator at the age of nine, while I had measles, but was discouraged because it 'wasn't a proper job.' Yet every piece I do, especially the 'Junk' is an illustration to a story, even if it's only a sentence that I've made up and never tell to anyone else."

Sometimes it's up to the viewer to supply a story--old frying pan holds a sleepy cat, peaking at us through one open eye. Often the extravagant titles tell the whole story, as in "Luciane--Dreaming of a Red Ribbon and Spectacular Wins at Nap, in the Demi-Monde, in Paris," the artist's homage to Toulouse-Lautrec, painted on the lyre back of a discarded antique mahogany straight chair. "My Father's Baby Bath" is the enameled basin in which her father, according to family history, was bathed as an infant. Now transformed, a self-absorbed mermaid floats inside, gazing into her looking glass, accompanied by several admiring carp.

Blue Pool
"Edward Lear's Tea Kettle"; oil and yacht varnish over pencil, with 'literary decoupage'; 1999; 8 x 9 x 7 inches
In The Canopy
"Luciane Dreaming of a Red Ribbon and Spectacular Wins at Nap, in the Demi-Monde, in Paris"; oil over pencil on mahogany chair back; 2001; 20 x 18 inches
Log with Lichens
"Mermaid Basin--My Father's Baby Bath"; Oil and yacht varnish on a 1920s enameled metal basin; 1999; 19 inches oval, 6-1/2 inches deep
Night Flight Salamanders
"Cupid and Campaspe Play at Cards for Kisses"; oil and yacht varnish on a 1920s wooden card table top; 1999; 22 x 22 inches "Alice's Chessboard: Homage to Sir JohnTenniel" oil & yacht varnish over pencil on the discarded leaf of a Victorian mahogany pembroke table; 2000; 20-7/8 x 18-1/4
 

 

 

Tula Art Center
75 Bennett Street, Gallery K-2
Atlanta, Georgia 30309
Telephone: 404-352-3778
Facsimile: 404-352-4314
Email: tdeansco@aol.com

© 1992-2001, Thomas Deans & Company, Inc.