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On the Soul-Laced Edge of Art: Hannah Beerman

“We had lots of pets and my grandma always made wild sculptures in every room even though she never called them sculptures. A giant parrot cage with a light-up goose and suspended engraved ostrich eggs with chili pepper lights and action figures enacting wild scenes would greet you when you opened the front door.” Beerman’s grandma would then craft terrariums filled with cake decorations, various mosses, disco lights, toys, a cut out of Albert Einstein acting out scenes from movies and from stories she would write. “They were always playing funk music and classical music and also the radio. We were always talking to each other.”

 

Moving onto her inspirations, her body of work encompasses a wealth of contrasting elements that juxtapose subtle and punchy denotations into vibrant canvases, giving life to works that have an abstract feel with a mixed media edge to match. “I’m inspired by all sorts of things but mostly desperation, survival and connection. Colors and textures. Loss, grief, humor. Just missing the mark. Hugs. Costumes. Invisible things. Holding hands. Love and intimacy. Shyness.” Beerman’s oeuvre features strokes that range from being extremely thin to exceedingly bold. On that note, she tries to justify the decision-making steps of her creative process as an accumulation of things that build up differently over time. “Spontaneity and slowness play different roles. I hope I don’t have to justify anything,” she remarks.

 

In her recent exhibit, titled Paintings — her third solo show at Kapp Kapp gallery, on view until January 6 at 86 Walker St in New York — Beerman teases the boundaries of what typically defines painting, incorporating a plethora of materials stemming from what surrounds her in daily life, such as cat toys, glitter, receipts, spare umbrella parts, coat racks, and clothing.

ill kiss your underarms, 2023
poet like acrobat, 2023
untitled string drawing no. 5, 2023
freedom rock up top, 2023
one foot up one foot down, 2023
big reveal, 2023
just between us, 2023
long side, 2023
solo star, 2023
black and blue, 2023
squirrelly purpley, 2023

On the challenges, she speaks with unguarded honesty. “I think that might be all I do as a painter, encounter challenges I mean. Then happy accidents. Formal, pictorial, technical — all as challenging as ever. Every time I start a painting it feels like I’ve never painted before in my life and I’m starting from scratch.” This leads me to ask what techniques she normally works with. “I always work on the floor,” she says. “I like gravity and anti-gravity. Sometimes eventually paintings make their way on to the wall. Always developing many surfaces at once, like layers and accumulation. Sometimes I carry around paintings for years and they breathe and fester. What is a beautiful and gentle word for fester? Grow? Comes with pain and awkwardness all the same. There’s air and sometimes seamlessness in space there too."

 

Veering between directness and ambiguity, we wrap up by unpacking what she’d like people to take away from her work. “Permission to be disjunctive, in love, inappropriate, take naps, sing really loud, hug your mom, be wrong, scratch your itches, grow out your armpit hair, learn a new language, or just walk away — hopefully, though not that last one.”

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