Evan Halter
I’ve always been interested in painting’s ability to function in
multiple states simultaneously, namely as both illusory space
and physical surface. While making my work, I am always aware
of that dichotomy, and I tend to paint as if a pane of glass were the
only thing separating me from what I’m depicting.
The imagery and framing devices in my work reference artists
including Giovanni Bellini, Ambrosius Bosschaert, Fra Angelico,
and, in particular, the still life paintings of Juan Sánchez Cotán.
In his book Looking at the Overlooked, Norman Bryson speaks
aptly of Cotán’s early paintings, writing that they “exactly reverse
the scale of values in which what is unique and powerful in the
world is the preordained object of the gaze, while that which
lacks importance is overlooked.” My desire is to push past simple
pastiche and to use these references as a means of pointing
toward something nonmaterial, something we can grasp at, but
that continually evades us.