NARES TRACES

May 16 – June 22, 2024 297 Tenth Avenue, New York
  • Kasmin is thrilled to announce its fifteenth solo exhibition at the gallery of work by multidisciplinary artist Jamie Nares (b. 1953). On view at 297 Tenth Avenue from May 16 through June 22, NARES TRACES will examine over 100 works on paper in a variety of media—namely oil, ink, and enamel—made after refocusing her artistic attention from film to painting in the early 1980s. Coolly perceptive, Nares’ works on paper share the same conceptual focus on movement, rhythm, and measurements of time that has driven the artist’s various bodies of work over the last fifty years. This exhibition points to paper as an essential instrument in Nares’ ongoing exploration of these themes.

    Jamie Nares established herself as a fixture among a milieu of avant-garde filmmakers, musicians, and visual artists in downtown New York in the late 1970s, when she co-founded the pioneering New Cinema on Saint Mark’s in 1977 and directed the no wave classic feature film Rome ’78 in 1978. In an effort to expand her artistic achievements, Nares made a conscious decision to redirect her attention to painting in 1982. On an impromptu visit to Egypt with the late critic Edit deAk in 1983, Nares would make her last film before a public hiatus from the medium. She would not shoot another video until 1987 nor another film until 1998. What followed was a sustained, introspective effort to mark con-trolled passages of time in a variety of media, often on paper.

    This exhibition affirms the experimental and transitive ethos of Nares’ practice. The subtle dynamism found in the works on view echoes the gentle measures of time and movement that characterize Nares’ return to video in 1987. As works from 1988 indicate, Nares would separate her strokes by their discrete colors, attaching them by the tail ends to give the appearance of a single, continuous multicolor stroke inching across the page. Mirroring the rippling forms that measure sound wave or heart beat frequencies, these works share the same undulating twists found in her iconic single brushstroke paintings of 1992 onwards. Nares’ observable reprisals of distinct themes, gestures, and materials underscore how her various bodies of work find common ground across time and space, traversing the artist’s biographical chronology.

    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1997
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1997
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
    • Jamie Nares, Samurai Walkman., 1988
      Jamie Nares, Samurai Walkman., 1988
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988
  • Lightweight and easily transportable, paper offered Nares the ability to stay productive as she frequently moved between a number of...
    Lightweight and easily transportable, paper offered Nares the ability to stay productive as she frequently moved between a number of New York studios over the years. On paper, Nares honed her ability to capture rhythmic motion and attuned gestures in two dimensions while routinely adjusting to new surroundings. Paper allowed Nares the freedom to try new approaches in this pursuit, offering a distinct aura of experimentation to the works on display. Tracing the speed and forcefulness with which the artist moved her hand, Nares’ various techniques delineate her gestures with the precision and delicacy of calligraphic mark making.
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1986
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1986
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1986
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1986
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1986
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1986
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1984
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1984
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1985
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1985
  • By the mid 1980s, Nares frequently turned to wax paper as a preferred support for her compositions. The soft sheen...
    By the mid 1980s, Nares frequently turned to wax paper as a preferred support for her compositions. The soft sheen of this paper enabled Nares’ paint to glide across its surface as the artist rendered hands, words, and three-dimensional shapes in oil. The texture of the wax paper would inspire Nares’ curiosity about the possibility of erasing and repeating a mark, a seminal discovery in her painting practice. Nares would soon develop her signature technique of using a squeegee to wipe away a painted mark before applying another to the same support, a practice she began with her momentous brushstroke paintings in 1992 and continues today. Elsewhere on paper, Nares achieved this effect by preparing her support with a ground layer of enamel paint that dried into a glossy surface on which Nares applied, erased, and reapplied strokes of oil paint.
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1996
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1996
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1996
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1996
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1996
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1996
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1983
  • Certain works in oil and ink uncover Nares’ early representations of the human figure, which entirely disappeared from her paintings...
    Certain works in oil and ink uncover Nares’ early representations of the human figure, which entirely disappeared from her paintings by the mid 1990s but remained ever constant in her film, video, and photography practices. A 1983 ink drawing made in the Edit deAk’s Wooster Street studio overlays boldly-contoured silhouettes in profile view, recalling the hieroglyphs that Nares saw in Egypt in 1983. Realized shortly upon Nares’ return to New York, the drawing mimics the chronophotographic process the artist adopted in the 1970s and used again to photograph her own body in motion in the early 2000s. Similarly hypnotic movements would later be captured in Nares’ landmark HD video of New York pedestrians, STREET, in 2011. Other works of 1983 see loosely-formed, lone figures floating in ethereal color fields on newsprint, whose limbs would soon transform into single strokes of paint in Nares’ later work.
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1997
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, 1997
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
  • Nares’ diaristic impulses on paper form a poetic register that touches upon both body and language. In certain cases, Nares defined her figures with mesmerizing linework that appears to slice the body into traces of the artist’s hand motions. Formed through a pattern of concentrated brushstrokes, a pair of hands—an omnipresent motif from the very beginning of Nares’ practice in the 1970s—checks its own pulse in a 1988 oil work, a testament to the rhythmic vigor of the artist’s oeuvre. The pulse—the measure of a beating heart, the metronome of human life—is revisited in one among an intimate series of note cards on view, accompanied by the suffixes “pre- / pro- / pulse.” Created between 1988 and 1992, Nares’ note cards reveal a universe in which her jottings, words and sketches appear together, consistent with the technique Nares employed to draft film scripts in the 1970s. In fragments and phrases, Nares’ writings range from literal descriptions (“helmet w. tuning forks”) to elusive word play (“bull-ette,” near sketches of a small bull’s head and a bullet). Some signal the self-conscious and deeply personal nature of the work, as seen in a depiction of a human figure drinking from a glass accompanied by the words “I am thirsty / my body needs water.”

    Stylistically, there is little distinction between the strokes of paint that make up Nares’ words and those that shape her abstract or figural forms, best seen in a 1990s depiction of a human face in oil on wax paper. In a monochromatic palette, the words “THE EYE WANTS TO SLEEP BUT THE HEAD IS NO MATTRESS” are engulfed by the face whose eyes remain wide open. Neither the picture nor the words take precedence over the delicate index of Nares’ gestures. Indicative of the artist’s studies of French poet and painter Henri Michaux in the early 1990s, Nares’ words weave in and out of narrative comprehension, positing the language of movement as essential to her expansive artistic vocabulary.

    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1988-1992
    • Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1990
      Jamie Nares, Untitled, c. 1990
  • About the Artist

    Jamie Nares
    Photo by Charlie Rubin

    Jamie Nares

    Over the course of five decades, Jamie Nares has investigated, challenged, and expanded the boundaries of her mul-tidisciplinary practice that encompasses film, music, painting, photography, and performance. She continues to em-ploy various media to explore physicality, motion, and the unfolding of time. In the 1980s, Nares began to paint using brushes of her own manufacture, leading to her monumental brushstrokes of the 1990s onwards which appear almost three-dimensional in their detail and depth, recording a gestural passage of time and motion across the canvas. 

    NARES TRACES marks the fifteenth solo exhibition of Nares’ work staged at Kasmin in New York since the gallery be-gan representing the artist in 1991. The exhibition also celebrates fifty years since the British-born artist’s critical move to New York in 1974.

    Learn More
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