In the world of artist Joseph Yaeger's latest exhibition, "Polygrapher," honesty is a luxury that few can afford. The paintings, which blend elements of film stills and found images with abstract expressionism, are like fragments of raw memory - raw, unprocessed, and sometimes disturbing.
Yaeger's own upbringing in the US was decidedly unremarkable, but his artistic process is anything but ordinary. Working exclusively with watercolour over gesso, he creates paintings that look deceptively polished from a distance, only to reveal their true nature when viewed up close. Cracks, pockmarks, and other imperfections are all part of the surface texture, as if the painting has been through some kind of violent process.
The people depicted in Yaeger's work are taken straight from film stills, often with faces obscured by masks or behind screens. It's a voyeuristic game, where the viewer is invited to question what's real and what's not - was that face held with force or passion? Are those eyes hiding something? The paintings are like a polygraph test, revealing secrets we'd rather keep hidden.
In his own words, Yaeger describes himself as "born with melancholy." His work is a reflection of this introspection, where the lines between confession and concealment blur. He's not looking for easy answers; instead, he's interested in exploring the complexities of human emotion.
The exhibition also includes numerous overtly Catholic works, like "Clean Windows Kill Birds," which features a woman's face seen through the screen of a confessional booth. This is part of Yaeger's ongoing exploration of his faith, where the boundaries between good and evil are constantly shifting.
Ultimately, Yaeger's work is about our need to leave a mark, to make a presence in the world. Even as he grapples with the imperfections and uncertainties of human experience, he finds beauty in those flaws - the bare edges of unframed canvases, thick with layers of encrusted gesso and pigment.
The exhibition "Polygrapher" at Modern Art is an intense, immersive experience that will leave you questioning what's real and what's not. And it's precisely this uncertainty that makes Yaeger's work so compelling - a world where honesty is a luxury, and the truth is always just out of reach.
Yaeger's own upbringing in the US was decidedly unremarkable, but his artistic process is anything but ordinary. Working exclusively with watercolour over gesso, he creates paintings that look deceptively polished from a distance, only to reveal their true nature when viewed up close. Cracks, pockmarks, and other imperfections are all part of the surface texture, as if the painting has been through some kind of violent process.
The people depicted in Yaeger's work are taken straight from film stills, often with faces obscured by masks or behind screens. It's a voyeuristic game, where the viewer is invited to question what's real and what's not - was that face held with force or passion? Are those eyes hiding something? The paintings are like a polygraph test, revealing secrets we'd rather keep hidden.
In his own words, Yaeger describes himself as "born with melancholy." His work is a reflection of this introspection, where the lines between confession and concealment blur. He's not looking for easy answers; instead, he's interested in exploring the complexities of human emotion.
The exhibition also includes numerous overtly Catholic works, like "Clean Windows Kill Birds," which features a woman's face seen through the screen of a confessional booth. This is part of Yaeger's ongoing exploration of his faith, where the boundaries between good and evil are constantly shifting.
Ultimately, Yaeger's work is about our need to leave a mark, to make a presence in the world. Even as he grapples with the imperfections and uncertainties of human experience, he finds beauty in those flaws - the bare edges of unframed canvases, thick with layers of encrusted gesso and pigment.
The exhibition "Polygrapher" at Modern Art is an intense, immersive experience that will leave you questioning what's real and what's not. And it's precisely this uncertainty that makes Yaeger's work so compelling - a world where honesty is a luxury, and the truth is always just out of reach.