Details:
① Artwork:
Fountains / Friday
Fountains / Friday depicts a number of semi-abstracted fountains rendered in dye on silk velvet in the artist's signature style. Natural energy is released through a human construction, water defying gravity and taking shape as it explodes out of unseen fountain tubes.
The artist is known for his paintings that position mushrooms and other figures from nature as twisting dancers floating in a velvety picture field. Fluid acts of exchange, viscosity, and surface manipulation situate themselves as methods of painting with a visceral and tactile sense of embodiment.
Specs:
③ Artist:
The subjects of Travis Boyer’s textile-based paintings reside in crucial moments of collision, self-definition, or reconciliation. An interface between the sensual and spiritual, Boyer’s silk velvet works respond to our approach and movement thanks to subtle changes in texture, depth, and color that result in a delightful diversity of surfaces within their materiality. For instance, the velvet has been pressed into a chrome sheen in some places yet deepened into dark fields of dye in others. Boyer’s paintings demand our participation—asking us to constantly reconsider their presence due to texture, angle, light, and air—and reward the viewer who engages with them in real life.
Travis Boyer was born in 1979 in Fort Worth, TX, and lives in New York, NY. He graduated with an MFA from Bard College in Annandale-On-Hudson, NY (2012).
He has mounted solo exhibitions at Peter Kilchmann Gallery in Paris, France (2024); Noon Projects in Los Angeles, CA (2023); Signal Gallery in New York, NY (2021); False Flag in New York, NY (2019); Confort Moderne in Poitiers, France (2018); Palais des Beauxs-Arts in Paris, France (2015); Johannes Vogt Gallery in New York, NY (2014); and Galerie Fons Welters in Amsterdam, The Netherlands (2013).
His works reside in the collections of the High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Georgia; the Colby College Museum of Art in Waterville, Maine; the Portland Museum of Art in Portland, Maine; and the Hood Museum of Art in Hanover, NH.
In 2021, Boyer took part in the Texas Biennal. He was among the first artists awarded the Fire Island Artist Residency. Boyer’s work has appeared in Artforum, The New Yorker, Vogue, and New York Magazine.