Francis Ryan
My interest in representational painting lies in its ability to invoke
the visual aspect of an absent world. I sometimes feel like an
intruder on that absent world shown looking back in the painting.
This series is rooted in the traditional discourse surrounding the
relationship between the viewer and the pictorial field, specifically
the consonance of observer and subject and the kinship of
painting, optics, and physiognomy. The virtual embodiment of the
viewer in the visual structure of the image is the foundation of
naturalism.
Each painting references the event of a flash photograph taken
during the screening of movies in various Los Angeles theaters.
The unexpected gesture momentarily interrupts the passive
viewing experience, making the audience aware that they have
now become the object of another’s gaze.
Through the physical language of painting, which replaces the
photograph as the primary document, this event is extended and
ultimately translated. I see the dark movie theater as a metaphor
for pictorial space. The audience is both viewer and subject, and
the flash discloses our voyeurism.