I have a memory of being in the back seat of our VW bus at night coming home. My head leaning, my cheek pressed against the cold window. The lights of our car illuminating the trunks of the trees in the forest on either side of the road we were on. The space in between the trees was a dark matte black. There, nothing caught the light of the car’s beams.
I thought, “I want to be like the dark spaces in between the trees at night.” For some reason the phrase, the idea has stuck with me. I pay attention when things stick.
Karin Campbell
In Between the Trees at Night
April 22 - May 21, 2022
Karin Campbell’s paintings are loosely rendered, held together with the rhythm and balance of a drunken sailor. They teeter on the brink of collapse: clashing styles, alternating speeds, and bright colors lie underneath and/or on top of murky ones. Abstract shapes emerge suddenly as recognizable and allow unexpected associations and open-ended narratives.
In the Pond, a large unstretched canvas, is presented in a way that is somewhere in between a traditional painting and a textile work, in a sense speaking to traditional quilt making. Like that process, the painting pieces together the artist’s reference points – memory, emotion, history, culture – through the varied marks Campbell uses, from applying paint with a brush to scraping away the surface, creating new textural surprises that serve to draw the viewer in.
In her drawings, Campbell pares down this process. Using charcoal and the act of erasing, figures become entangled with themselves or others, emerging in the foreground with the ghostly remnants of where they started.
Campbell’s source material is tied to memory and sensory experience. For the artist, the taking in of these reference points helps to activate the dark space between the trees.
Karin Campbell (b.1962, San Diego) is a multidisciplinary artist living and working in Brooklyn, NY. Recent group exhibitions include Shelter, Miranda Bosch Gallery (NY) and Catbox Contemporary. Her work has been shown at the Queens Museum of Art, the 2002 Whitney Biennial, and PS1 Contemporary Art Center. Campbell holds a BFA from RISD and an MFA from Tyler School of Art. This is her debut solo show with Shelter.
Installation photos by Rob Ventura