Derek Paul Jack Boyle

Ulterior

Project Info

  • 💙 SMART OBJECTS
  • 🖤 Derek Paul Jack Boyle
  • 💜 Marie Heilich
  • 💛 Marten Elder

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"Show Mountain", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
"Show Mountain", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
"Nooks", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
"Nooks", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
"Decision", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 30 x 48 in, 2023
"Decision", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 30 x 48 in, 2023
Bunkers, acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
Bunkers, acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
"Shooting Star", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 31 x 48 in, 2023
"Shooting Star", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 31 x 48 in, 2023
"Extension", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
"Extension", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 83 in, 2023
"The Distance", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 74 in, 2023
"The Distance", acrylic on cradled birch panel, 48 x 74 in, 2023
SMART OBJECTS is pleased to present "Ulterior", a solo exhibition by Derek Paul Jack Boyle. Eventual, forthcoming, expected – also beyond what’s shown or expressed, "Ulterior" describes paradoxical tensions between architecture, landscape, and objects in an exhibition of new paintings by Derek Paul Jack Boyle. Like a dismembered gallery or studio space, fragments of pensive empty rooms; blank walls, doors, windows, stairs, hallways, collide with and collapse into desert landscapes of canyon clefts, roads, trees, rocks, and prismatic skies. In a show about showing, Boyle equips the stuff of solitude as metaphors for interpersonal dynamics. In lieu of figures, utilities, such as chairs, extension cords, lamps, and ladders, act as characters when set in relation to their broken and amassed surroundings. While stylistically immediate, abstracted color fields merge to form deep durational distances. Textured with grass, walls, dirt, ice, clouds, and light, flat plains of painterly space meet at exaggerated angles to construct impossibly sharp perspectives and durational depths. In illusory scenes, intermediate terrains demarcate infinite pathways, as observed in the stretch of chairs and candles precariously supported by dark-violet ice in "The Path", or following an electrical current from an outlet into unknown territory in "Extension". Set in theatrical palettes of dusks and dawns, voids and connections of impossible landscapes flip space to reveal secret passages and hidden portals, staging a choice to enter or bypass as in "Decision", "Shooting Star", and "The Distance". In a hauntingly hued mese en abyme, or scene containing a smaller version of itself, "Model Room" displays a recursive iteration of itself, even replicating an inexplicable veil of light emanating from the room’s corner. The Droste effect of eternal returns is magnified in "Show Mountain" in which a framed sunset that could play the role of either window or painting, is exhibited next to a sculpture-cum-venue mountain that endlessly repeats replicas within. A sense of comedic dread mounts when the punchline is that the punchline may never arrive. Merging, incepting, interrupting, or otherwise set in relation, the inanimate is animated with meaning when playing out private melodramas. For Boyle, new worlds are discovered in intermediate spaces; between interiors and exteriors, earnest and joking, inevitability and mystery, beginnings and endings. While not solid destinations, the scenes trust in their own premonitions that eventually a path will appear. ~ Derek Paul Jack Boyle (b. 1985, Cambridge MA) received his MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, RI and his BA from Emerson College in Boston, MA. Boyle's work has been featured in the New York Times, Contemporary Art Review Los Angeles,, VICE Creators Project, Elephant Magazine, and WYNC/NPR's Radiolab. Recent exhibitions include: "Verhandlungsbasis", Palmer Galerienhaus - Stuttgart, Germany; "Abstract with Figure", James Fuentes, New York; "Outs" (solo), SMART OBJECTS, Los Angeles; "Nostos", Matthew Brown Gallery, Los Angeles; "Den" (solo), SMART OBJECTS, Los Angeles; "Replica", Insect Gallery, Los Angeles; "All the Small Things", Steve Turner, Los Angeles; "Unease" (solo), SMART OBJECTS, Los Angeles; "Can’t Fix Broken" (duo w/ Mitra Saboury), Alter Space, San Francisco; "You Catch More Flies with Arsenic Than Honey", Club Pro, Los Angeles; "Thin Places", SMART OBJECTS, Landers, CA; Los Angeles; "Wwwest", Johannes Vogt Gallery, New York; "Plainly to Propound", Gavlak Gallery, Los Angeles; and recent fairs including NADA Miami and Felix LA. Boyle is represented by SMART OBJECTS in Los Angeles.
Marie Heilich

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