Martha Tuttle
thinking about Simone Weil, 2022
Silk, dye, pigment, thread
72 x 48 inches
Martha Tuttle
the woman asleep in daylight, paradiso, 2022
Wool, silk, linen, pigment, dye
20 x 16 inches
Martha Tuttle
the delicate touch of Helena's foot reaching out to the window's edge, 2022
Wool, silk, linen, pigment, dye
72 x 48 inches
Martha Tuttle
round about and of equal brightness rose a lustre (dawn), 2022
Wool, silk, linen, pigment
20 x 16 inches
Martha Tuttle
like the sky before a tornado - strange, silent, foretelling, 2022
Wool, silk, linen, pigment, dye
72 x 48 inches
Martha Tuttle
intimacy with inwardness because most experiences are unprovable, 2022
Silk, linen, pigment, dye
46 x 31 inches
Martha Tuttle
an unclear relationship between matter and the invisible, 2022
Wool, silk, linen, pigment, dye
72 x 48 inches
Martha Tuttle
An ear, a hand, a mouth, an offering, an angel, 2022
Chalcedony in different colors and different forms, found quartz, stone cast into glass, a cast of the inside space of a cow vertebrae, cast glass of a fossil, a piece of sea glass, an ear carved from alabaster, cast bronze, stones cast from steel
Dimensions variable
Martha Tuttle
an ear, a hand, a mouth, an offering, an angel, 2022
Nut casing, clay forms, found quartz, gift stone, stone cast into glass, stones cast into steel, quartz, two agate slices that look like angel wings
Dimensions variable
Rhona Hoffman Gallery is pleased to present Martha Tuttle’s third solo exhibition of new paintings and sculptures entitled An ear, a hand, a mouth, an offering, an angel. Tuttle’s beautiful and ethereal woven paintings are composed of painted and colored silk organza, hand-spun wool, and sewn fabrics. The materials are often translucent, exposing the metal stretcher bars and their tensioning hardware. The sheer surfaces reveal the architecture of the textiles’ support system, grounding the work as distinctly human-made. The visible bars further serve to identify the work as part of the tradition and history of painting.
The works that comprise An ear, a hand, a mouth, an offering, an angel were made with a particular painting in mind - The Dream of Saint Helena (1570) - by Italian Renaissance painter Paolo Veronese (1528-1588). Tuttle identified the three primary reasons for her captivation with the late Renaissance painting as being: the color palette, the composition, and the narrative of the main subject receiving a message from a dream. Tuttle was moved by this notion that specific forms can be intuited in this liminal dream state, similar to the way her compositions are built.
The rich oranges, pinks, yellows, and golds of Veronese’s religious painting are reflected in several of Tuttle’s new paintings. These paintings are composed of the marbly grays, chocolate browns, creamy whites, and saturated and translucent blacks evocative of past bodies of works. However several now also “pop” with a swath of rosy pink, the result of the natural pigment of Madder root. Tuttle’s process of coloring the silks in shallow pools of pigment solution or dye vats often results in the simulation of not only texture but also topography, as is evidenced in Thinking about Simone Weil, for example.
Compositionally, Tuttle extracts inspiration from Veronese’s painting through his geometric use of shapes, angles, and lines - particularly triangles. In making these paintings Tuttle notes how she “...enjoyed working with a ruler to map out the lines in the Veronese painting and to make my drawings that ended up as the compositions.” The Dream of Saint Helena depicts Helena, the mother of the first Christian Emperor, Constantine, in a dream state. Interestingly the dreamer and her dream are concurrently visible. In Helena’s dream, two angels show her where the True Cross (the cross that Christ was crucified upon) was buried. Tuttle contemplates dreams in her artmaking and also identifies with the idea of a dream’s ability to disseminate messages.
Finally there are two floor installations of small objects in either corner of the room at the entrance of the exhibition. They directly relate to the title of the exhibition. These intimate installations read as offerings or altars, encouraging the viewer to crouch down to better identify the collection of rocks, clay, stone cast into glass, steel, bones, nuts, and other predominantly natural materials.
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Martha Tuttle (b. 1989, New Mexico) earned her MFA in Painting from The Yale School of Art and her BA at Bard College. Recent solo exhibitions include Geologies (2022) at Camille Obering Fine Art, Guesthouse in Jackson Hole, WY; Wild irises grow in the mountains (2021) at Tilton Gallery in New York; Ma/Ma (2021) at Lora Reynolds Gallery in Austin, TX; Moonrays (2021) at Koki Arts Gallery in Tokyo, Japan; Outlooks: Martha Tuttle (2020) at the Storm King Center in New Windsor, NY; Constellations I drew in Nevada (2020) at Luce Gallery in Turin, Italy; and Bacchante by the Sea (2019) at Geukens & DeVil in Antwerp, Belgium.
Tuttle has participated in residencies at the Montello Foundation Residency, Montello, NV; the Rauschenberg Foundation Residency, Captiva, FL; the DNA Residency, Provincetown, MA; the Sondre Green Farm Residency, Noresund, Norway; the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program, Brooklyn, NY; the UCross Foundation, Clearmont, WY; and A-Z West, Joshua Tree, CA.
Her artwork is in the collections of The Museum of Modern Art (New York), The University of San Diego (California), and the Smith College Museum of Art (Massachusetts). Her writing has been published in The Brooklyn Rail, Agnes Martin: Independence of Mind (Radius Books), Best! Letters From Asian Americans in the arts, Weaving Language I: Lexicon (ed. Francesca Capone) (forthcoming), and she co-edited Return to the Field alongside Gabriel Kruis for Wendy’s Subway. Tuttle lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.