Libby Rosa
Libby Rosa’s work blurs the distinction between abstraction
and representation, causing cognitive dissonance. The
painterly situations showcase the metamorphic nature of paint.
Questioning where the representational motifs start and stop and
where the painterly abstractions begin and end is central to how
the work is visually experienced.
The paintings function as illusionary windows or mirrors with
mise en abîmes that reveal worlds within worlds. At the same
time, the works poke at the materiality and fluidity of paint on
two-dimensional surfaces. The paintings lose their functionality
as windows when drips of paint interrupt the representational
landscapes.
Along with a play of visual understanding, Rosa works with
the expressive qualities of color, using hues that create
contradictions and mixed emotions such as peaceful / menacing.
She intentionally uses tools and processes that connect the
imagery to the mark making. She uses the traditional paintbrush
to render hair and a squeegee for flowing water, and cuts into the
canvas to create holes and spaces to fill.
Although the works are large, the scale of the imagery is often
indeterminable. Some works play as micro views, such as seeing
through one’s own wet eyelashes, while others are zoomed out
like a theatrical backdrop. This push and pull sensationalizes the
concept of “seeing out” of oneself while also “seeing through”
oneself.