Talia Levitt
Region: Northeast
A crumpled letter, a shmata, those moon undies Rachel gave me,
a 1960s table runner, a bouquet from last spring, Katie’s candle
(and holder), and the red bra that fits only one week per month
pile up in a blue bucket in my studio. These objects are staged
with others to create nonlinear narratives that reflect my lived
experiences. They also engage with, and poke at, the history of
the still life as a marginalized and anti-academic genre. Rather
than fool the viewer into believing that there are real objects or
a landscape in front of them, as is the historical intention of
trompe l’oeil, I use similarly realistic rendering in an effort
to expose the painting and the painter for what they are. The
painting is acrylic marks on a canvas. The painter is a messy,
young, creative, woman, and/or you. Her studio is chaotic, dirty,
and random. When this pseudo–trompe l’oeil is used, certain
elements of the painting seem “real” enough to emphasize the
thingness of itself, and remove the myth of the painter.