Archive
2021
KubaParis
ANSKA
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Untitled, 2020, oil and pigment on canvas,160x110 cm](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_Untitled_2020_BlakeandVargas-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Installation View, ANSKA, Blake & Vargas](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_BlakeandVargas_View5-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Installation View II, ANSKA, Blake & Vargas](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_BlakeandVargas_View6-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Her, 2020, oil and pigment on canvas, 230x200cm](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_HER_2020_BlakeandVargas-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Spells, 2019, oil on canvas, 50x50cm](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_Spells_2019_BlakeandVargas-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, night creatures, 2020, oil and pigment on canvas, 130x130cm](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_NightCreatures_2020_BlakeandVargas-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Indigo, 2018, oil and pigment on canvas, 200x100cm](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_Indigo_2018_BlakeandVargas-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Installation View III, ANSKA, Blake & Vargas](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_BlakeandVargas_View1-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, T, 2019-2020, oil and pigment on canvas, 180x180cm](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_T_2019-2020_BlakeandVargas-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Papryka II, 2020, oil and pigment on canvas,170x200 cm](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_PaprykaII_2020_BlakeandVargas-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
![Agnė Juodvalkytė, Installation View IV, ANSKA, Blake & Vargas](https://backend.kubaparis.com/assets/archive/2021/02/agne-juodvalkyte-blake-vargas/ANSKA_AgneJuodvalkyte_BlakeandVargas_View2-scaled.jpg?v=1658238045)
Location
Blake & VargasDate
28.01 –25.02.2021Curator
Sarah BernauerPhotography
Philippe GerlachSubheadline
We are pleased to present ANSKA, Agne Juodvalkyte’s first solo exhibition at Blake & Vargas. The exhibition consists of large-scale paintings and intimate pieces, that the artist created over the past 8 months. The title of the show, ANSKA, a Lithuanian term of endearment referring to the artist’s grandmother, sets and defines the symbolic space of the exhibition that is centered around the complex nature of memory and the imaginary act of remembering. All canvases shown are the result of a slow process of color layering. Juodvalkyte’s use of color resembles an alchemical examination of the material’s different states of matter: paint made of plants, natural pigments, graphic dust – from raw to fluid - are applied on the canvas in bold gestures. Combined, they result in multi-layered abstract landscapes that invite the viewer to immerse themselves, yet refuse any concrete reading. Agne Juodvalkyte uses textiles and painting as a framework to understand culture, history and technology. Often presented in an anthropomorphic way, her works breathe their past into the present, becoming multidimensional artifacts extending not only into space but also into time. Born in 1987 in Vilnius, Lithuania. Agne Juodvalkyte lives and works in Berlin and Vilnius.Text
On the estuary we found the black clay the same day
we found the first berries. I made promises to myself.
There was a dress that I had thought of as ‘blackberry
dress’ and I kept it folded in a loose ball in a
cupboard. I used this
At a similar time, I saw a wonderful thing. A bird flew
low to a large mint metal flat roof. Its shadow followed
it closely and suddenly dropped to the ground like a
line of soot falling. This was spoken to a small empty
shelf in a bedroom
Then it moved. On a walk alongside the estuary, I
walked away from the tide coming in and heard lovely
rhythms on a metal roof.
I remember when there is fabric involved. I remember
the children on the sand, one’s pale blue coat with
diamond patches lying across my legs. I remember
vividly the arrangement made along an electricity
line by someone I do not know but feel I see often. It
must be her house. Clear short lines, or tubes line it,
facing out into to the cool air in every direction. Sun,
sun, light, lines, the lines stay in my head, the sun
stays in the lines. I’ve waited for Winter to write.
Sarah Boulton
Sarah Boulton