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Moffat Takadiwa, The Red Line, 2022, plastic toothbrush heads and plastic bottle caps, Ø 250 cm. Photo A. Mole. Courtesy Semiose, Paris.

Semiose

PAT ANDREA, Crosswalk, Huile et caséine sur toile, 260 x 320 cm, dyptique, 2021 - crédit photographique Romain Darnaud

STROUK GALLERY

Stems Gallery

Karyn Lyons 1981, Etats-Unis

As Tears Go By

  • KARYN LYONS, The Secret Salon, 2023, Oil on linen – Huile sur toile, 76.2 x 58.4 cm. 30 x 23 in.

KARYN LYONS, The Secret Salon, 2023, Oil on linen – Huile sur toile, 76.2 x 58.4 cm. 30 x 23 in.

“The Midnight Munchies; The Straight C Student; The Intruder; Over the Hills Where The Spirits Fly. The slightest movement of this slender figure is a clue. Here is a teenager on the verge of tears and encounters, a teenager from the East Coast who has come to spend her vacation in an English castle, or perhaps a Roman villa. A journey between Europe and the United States, at that precise moment when childhood slips away, when another body starts to grow inside your own. In this house, the paintings reflect the teenager’s own image, metamorphosed into a marquise-virgin with child, or a nude goddess with an androgynous bust. She wears chinos, polo shirts, schoolgirl sweaters … Looking at her reflection, she duplicates herself, becoming the one she embraces, forming a couple with some absent person, embracing herself, naked, in a garden of Eden with a boy. Is it a dream, a stolen image or a reminiscence inspired by the reading of Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights? Each painting reads like the diary of a close friend. Each one brings out a familiar yet unknown heroine, somewhere between Jean-Philippe Delhomme’s uptown memories, Sofia Coppola’s Virgin Suicides, Sagan’s Bonjour Tristesse, or the lived-in melancholy found in Violette d’Urso: “I described my emotions scrupulously, because I had noticed that in changing with time, we could no longer regain our old vision of things at a certain point, that periods that had once seemed crucial shrank until they no longer occupied more than a tiny place in our minds.”

Past and present collide. What the eye pins down art recomposes in this private zone before Instagram and the metaverse. There is no internet, time is long, the eye that lingers on each detail, a candlestick, a yellow pencil, a shirt rolled up at the elbows, it is as much that of the painter-narrator, as that of the subject who has become ourselves. It is the beginning of a story, and the end of another. Such is undoubtedly the mystery hidden behind this daily life seemingly above all suspicion, in which all doubts, all silences, all identifications infiltrate little by little. Where memory documents, the artist questions and sows the strange. Connecticut Summer Dream? As they dried, the tears became shapes, gestures, colors, and feelings. Just Kids. Universal and singular at the same time. At the genesis of these paintings, there are words, themselves sprouting in the promiscuity of this kitchen where Keith Richard and Mick Jagger composed As Time Goes By, their first song which became As Tears Go By. The one that began with the verse:
“It is the evening of the day
I sit and watch the children play”

Through its chord sequences, this cult song participated in the advent of Marianne Faithfull’s career, and then of course the legendary Rolling Stones themselves. “Come up with something that belongs to you alone,” Andrew Loog Oldham, their manager, had asked them.

For Karyn Lyons, this song is a kind of “sound madeleine”. Listening to it, she immerses herself, blue apnea of Secret Salon, travelling like the Pepsi Generation. Years later, in the pandemic confinement, it acted as a catalyst, the starting point of a sensitive exploration. With Karyn Lyons, G, A, C, D7th, and E minor metamorphosed into a polychrome score. The twelve-string acoustic guitar draws lines through the inner world. We become witnesses, on the border of reality and fiction, to the precise point where absence becomes presence again, and life, a breath. With Karyn Lyons, painting is like literature, “It does not repair, it makes another life possible, it allows the vital flow confined in darkness to circulate again,2 to pass from one body to another, from one heart to another (…).”

1. Violette d’Urso, Même le bruit de la nuit a changé, Flammarion, 2023.
2. Jean Marie Laclavetine, Une amie de la famille, Gallimard, 2019.

—
Laurence Benaïm

Exhibition from April 15 to May 28, 2023.

Rendez-Vous

Saturday 27 May 2023 from 12:00 pm to 7:00 pm

Finissage de l’exposition As Tears Go By de Karyn Lyons

View all events
11 Rue Pastourelle
75003 Paris, France
0140290880 stemsgallery.com

The gallery

Stems Gallery is a gallery based in Brussels and Paris. The gallery opened in 2015 by brother and sister Pascaline and Guillaume Smets. The gallery exhibits the work of emerging artists with a focus on introducing contemporary American artists to European audiences. Highlighting work in all mediums and formats. The gallery’s program is driven by intuition and curiosity. Each exhibition is the result of a collaboration between the gallery and the artist.

Gallery artists

Allison Zuckerman, Arghavan Khosravi, Aryo Toh Djojo, Coady Brown, Jane Dickson, John Fou, Julien Boudet, Marievic, Mario Ayaka, Nick Doyle, Olivier Souffrant, Paul Rouphail, Shaina Mccoy, Susumu Kamijo, Tony Toscan, Tyrrell Winston

Galerie sélectionnée par Salomé Monpetit

In the thematic « Contemporary Art »

Adrian Paci, According to Paradjanov, 2023, Huile sur toile, 50 x 68 cm, courtesy de l’artiste et de la Galerie Peter Kilchmann Paris / Zurich. Photo: Axel Fried

Galerie Peter Kilchmann

Adrian Paci 1969, Albanie

Soft With Sorrow

DEBRE Olivier (1920-1999)
Composition 1951
Huile sur toile
Monogrammée et datée en bas à droite, annotée au dos 17-XII-46
64X53 cm

GALERIE FAIDHERBE

Parcours abstrait de l’après-guerre à nos jours — Group show

Sans titre, porcelaines, dimensions variables

Galerie Jean Fournier

Frédérique Lucien 1960, France

Jardin d'hiver

In the thematic « Women Artists »

Ana Maria Tavares, Deviant topographies from Paxton to Burle Marx II. Courtesy : the artist and GALLERIA CONTINUA

GALLERIA CONTINUA

Sabrina Mezzaqui 1964, Italie

Di punto in bianco

• ⁣⁣

Giovanni Ozzola 1982, Italie

For a little while

•

Ana Maria Tavares 1958, Brésil

Sortir du silence : au-delà de la modernité

Aude Herlédan (French, b. 1966), To be moved -2022, Techniques mixtes sur toile - encadrement en chêne brun - 130 x 97 cm, ©1831 Art Gallery

1831 Art Gallery

To be moved — Group show

Shona McAndrew: Hold You Tight, 2022, acrylique sur toile, 218,4 x 106,7cm

Galerie LJ

Shona McAndrew 1990, France

Sydney Vernon 1995, Etats-Unis

Nadia Waheed 1992, Arabie-Saoudite

"Inner Matter", sur une proposition d'Anne-Laure Lemaitre

In the tour « Marais »

Ana Maria Tavares, Deviant topographies from Paxton to Burle Marx II. Courtesy : the artist and GALLERIA CONTINUA

GALLERIA CONTINUA

Sabrina Mezzaqui 1964, Italie

Di punto in bianco

• ⁣⁣

Giovanni Ozzola 1982, Italie

For a little while

•

Ana Maria Tavares 1958, Brésil

Sortir du silence : au-delà de la modernité

Soufiane Ababri, Bed work / (The story didn’t stop at Jack’s hotel), 2023, Color pencil and photo collage on paper, 82 x 122 cm (framed), 32 1/4 x 48 in (SA23D3)

Praz-Delavallade

Soufiane Ababri 1985, Maroc

Si nous ne brûlons pas, comment éclairer la nuit

Mark Geffriaud, Mirror Eye, 2023. Photo Aurélien Mole

gb agency

Mark Geffriaud 1977, France

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