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EMMA FINEMAN: MAY I HAVE YOUR ATTENTION PLEASE?

Past exhibition
6 April - 11 May 2019
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Works
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, The Queen Has White Teeth, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, Boys Club, 2018
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, The Fool, 2018
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, Dreamer, 2018
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, Drummer King, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, Third Position, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, It's Fiction My Fact, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: EMMA FINEMAN, Showtime, 2019
  • EMMA FINEMAN, The Queen Has White Teeth, 2019 
  • EMMA FINEMAN, Boys Club, 2018 
  • EMMA FINEMAN, The Fool, 2018
  • EMMA FINEMAN, Dreamer, 2018 
  • EMMA FINEMAN, Drummer King, 2019 
  • EMMA FINEMAN, Third Position, 2019 
  • EMMA FINEMAN, It's Fiction My Fact, 2019
  • EMMA FINEMAN, Showtime, 2019
EMMA FINEMAN, The Queen Has White Teeth, 2019 
Overview
Installation Imagery / Photo credit Damian Griffiths
Installation Imagery / Photo credit Damian Griffiths

Throughout the early 19th century, Joseph Grimaldi was England’s most popular entertainer. His portrayal of the clown in pantomime harlequinades became so well known that this role became colloquially known as ‘Joey’, and his invention of whiteface makeup is a staple of the modern clown outfit that still persists today. For May I Have Your Attention Please, (her first solo with BEERS London), Fineman uses self­-portraiture to reimagine herself as Grimaldi, replete with sharp red cheek makeup and protruding white ruff.

 

An important figure throughout history for its use in democratising society, The Fool, is able to present thinly veiled truths in the face of the powerful. Fineman uses this guise as a method of addressing her own position within a state of political unrest and heightened voyeurism. We are always watching the lives (and performance of lives) of others and, in a sense, are always performing ourselves through social media. With the slapstick performances of clowns being exaggerated and overly­-simplified renditions of human emotions, Fineman’s work points toward the disconnect between modern tools of communication like emoticons (which fail to convey the complexity and depth of true feeling) and genuine human interaction.

As Jung posits “ The trickster is a collective shadow figure, a summation of all the inferior traits of character in individuals.” With aspects of society such as politics often being referred to as a ‘circus’ (and politicians themselves as ‘clowns’), Fineman utilises clowns in the circus as a symbol for our current state of affairs, where we bare witness to this performance (or circus act), and the clown is acutely aware of its being watched.

 

EMMA FINEMAN (b. 1991, Berkeley, California), lives and works in London, UK. In 2018 she graduated with an MA In Painting from Royal College of Art, London, and graduated Magna Cum Laude with a BFA in Painting from Maryland Institute College of Art in 2013. Solo exhibitions include: Realms of the [Un]real, Public Gallery, London (2019–upcoming); Fin_Bow, Eleven Spitalfields Gallery, London, UK (2017); O.S 1, The Great Highway Gallery, San Francisco, CA (2016); Samgongur, The Sub, San Francisco, CA (2015); and Solo Booth, White Space, Art Palm Beach, FL (2014). Selected group exhibitions include John Moores Painting Prize Exhibition, Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool, UK (2018); Bloomberg New Contemporaries, South London Gallery, London, UK (2018); Surge, East Wing Biennial 13, Somerset House, London, UK (2018); and RBA Rising Stars, Framers Gallery, London, UK (2018). She has been included in publications such as Juxtapoz, ArtMaze.

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  • May I Have Your Attention Pls? (April 2019) Read more
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