Natalie Wadlington
I am attracted to banal scenes that express the cyclical order in
which we simultaneously perform and become victims in acts
of conflict, domination, submission, misunderstanding, comingtogether,
and falling-apart. This humorous but tragic cycle
is repeated at a societal level as we navigate an increasingly
fractured, anxiety-ridden, globalized world. The paintings are
similarly splintered and spatially dense, as they represent the
fraught power struggle between self and other. These scenes of
conflict are where we grapple with the limitations of our personal
identity and either succeed or fail at mutual understanding. In the
face of a fugitive, increasingly accelerated society, our affective
turn to the nostalgic is complicated by these figurative paintings
that speak to the difficulty of achieving understanding.
The body, as profoundly commodified in a neoliberal economy,
exerts its ego as an act of self-identification with violent
consequences. These colorful and playful paintings are
consumable bodies that speak about suffering in contemporary
culture. I paint the resulting scenes with specificity and drama,
depicting dynamic interactions that are absurd, humorous,
and lonely.