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Florascape

Swanson’s new work in “Florascape” focuses around scenes with multiple vantage points. One can see an industrial infrastructure that looms in the distance behind a foreground of a blooming meadow brush or catch a formal grid breaking apart, skewing the tight, clean squares.
Eleanor Harwood Gallery
Nov 3rd – Dec 15th 2018
San Francisco , 1275 Minnesota Street Suite 206Map
Opening Reception: Saturday, Nov. 3rd, 6am -Tuesday, Oct. 23rd, 8am
, 'Planar Impression,' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Planar Impression, 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

$10,000

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, 'Material Bloom,' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Material Bloom, 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

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, 'Elemental (Graft),' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Elemental (Graft), 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

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, 'Elemental (Green),' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Elemental (Green), 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

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, 'Spatial Growth,' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Spatial Growth, 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

$6,500

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, 'Operational Slope,' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Operational Slope, 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

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, 'Alumina Drift,' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Alumina Drift, 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

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, 'Splitscape,' 2017, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Splitscape, 2017

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

$1,200

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, 'Crystalline Outgrowth,' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Crystalline Outgrowth, 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

$8,500

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, 'Sediment Glow,' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Sediment Glow, 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

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, 'Elemental (Blue),' 2018, Eleanor Harwood Gallery

William Swanson

Elemental (Blue), 2018

Eleanor Harwood Gallery

$2,000

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Press Release

Exhibit Dates:
Opening reception: Saturday, November 3rd, 6-8pm, 
November 4th - December 15th, 2018

October 16th, 2018 (San Francisco, CA) — Eleanor Harwood Gallery is pleased to present Florascape, our third solo show with William Swanson. Swanson is a painter’s painter, his images so detailed and so abstracted in areas of the paintings that the images feel tightly controlled while some areas paint is being allowed to pool and coalesce into curious shapes, colors, and textures. There is an element of chance in the works but also a strict architectural grid that is more apparent in some paintings and only hinted at in others.
Kenneth Baker described the work best in a 2014, when he reviewed Swanson’s first solo show with EHG. Baker wrote: “bits of yellow, and orange, white and gray near the center suggest breakup in a digital image transmission, perhaps hinting that even the output of the painter’s mind has acquired the syntax of digital media.” Baker continues, “Swanson has a wonderful way with fine details that, once noticed, can remake our reading of an entire picture, looking suddenly like distant features of land or architecture or simply hovering in scale-less abstraction.”
In Swanson’s new work in Florascape, his focus is around scenes with multiple views and vantage points. For example in Material Bloom, industrial infrastructure looms in the distance behind a foreground of a blooming meadow brush. The painting suggests hopeful and ever resilient plants growing under a knitted sky of omnipresent digital connections. They are in the fore, providing the spikes and delights of color, despite a hovering, dark sky.

In “Spacial Growth”, mushrooms and fungi tower in the foreground while we see a grid in the lower left, seemingly a last background layer that maybe shouldn’t have been exposed. Swanson uses the fungi as markers of life cycles, but slyly is also referencing psychotropic substances. In general the paint texture throughout the body of work is analogous to geologic chemical processes. In “Spacial Growth”, we are forced to consider if the shifting and flowing paint is an indicator of shifting perception brought on by a mind altering substance or a reference to fantastic spore explosions caught by slow motion footage. In the right center of the painting the grid breaks apart and skews the tight, clean squares. Order is breaking apart, or at the very least, being rearranged.

Swanson’s painting techniques and tempos feel akin to Math Rock, which is “characterized by complex, atypical rhythmic structures (including irregular stopping and starting), counterpoint, odd time signatures, angular melodies, and extended, often dissonant, chords.” He composes his paintings with such care, but leaves small areas to abandon. His poured pools are allowed to settle and cure, he then excavates back through layers of pigment to find a space to populate and build upon introducing polyrhythms of space and paint. And like Math Rock, the human voice/form is not the main character in these works. The paint, the implied architecture, rhythms of the space and the suggestion of disaster and renewal are the themes and stories at the center of these works.

Swanson is concerned with increasing occurrences of super storms, wildfires, and major climate events and they affect his outlook and how he presents his particular view on the landscape. His spaces feel like human environments swept clean by forces of nature. However bleak that may sound he contends that disaster can be a transformative event in the long view.

About the Artist
Swanson has earned great critical praise over the last several years with reviews in Art in America, ArtNews, The Los Angeles Times, The San Francisco Chronicle, Anthem, Artweek, The LA Weekly, and art ltd. His 2011 solo exhibition at Marx & Zavattero was acclaimed as one of the “Top Ten Painting Shows in the U.S.” on The Huffington Post. Swanson has had solo exhibitions at DCKT Contemporary, New York, and Walter Maciel Gallery, Culver City. Group exhibitions include Future Tense: Reshaping the Landscape, The Neuberger Museum of Art, Purchase, NY; I Want to Feel at Home Here, Milepost 5, Portland, OR; and Built Against Site, Paragraph, Kansas City, MO.
His work was also featured in Bay Area Now 3 at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco. Swanson received his BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1992 and currently lives and works in San Francisco, California. His works are in many collections including the West Collection and the Progressive Art Collection.

About Eleanor Harwood Gallery
Eleanor Harwood Gallery opened September 2006. The programming of the gallery focuses on emerging to mid-career artists exhibiting nationally and internationally. The roster includes artists that are represented in major American and European collections. The gallery actively promotes and encourages career growth for represented artists.

Location: 
1275 Minnesota Street, Suite 206
San Francisco, CA 94107
Hours
: Tuesdays 1:00-5:00pm, Wednesday-Saturday, 11am-5:00pm
And by appointment
Contact: 
(p) 415.867.7770
 (e) [email protected]

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William Swanson
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