Melanie Daniel: Only Four Degrees

May 18, 2019 — Sep 8, 2019
Level 2 Hunting Gallery

Melanie Daniel’s fear for humankind’s relationship with the natural world has fueled the paintings and works on view in Melanie Daniel: Only Four Degrees, her Michigan Artist Series exhibition at GRAM.

In these recent large-scale paintings, works on paper, and ceramics Daniel imagines a world at the brink of collapse by our chronic, longstanding disregard for its well-being. The people who populate her rich narrative pictures are painfully aware of their difficult circumstances and have adopted various methods to cope with their new surroundings. Daniel’s garish, unnatural palette, dense areas of vibrating pattern, and skewed perspectives underscore the uneasy relationship between the subjects and their environment.

The figures in her paintings and drawings still attempt the mundane tasks of daily life, but in a world inhospitable to normal routine they appear unmoored. In Villagers, a group gathered beneath an outdoor tarp prepare food. Instead of a bucolic picnic, the scene seems more a desperate attempt to maintain a semblance of normalcy. In the painting Only Four Degrees, a lone figure within a post-tsunami landscape futilely attempts to create a power source, or perhaps to make contact with others. In these works, the specific aims of Daniel’s protagonist are ambiguous, and often humorously hopeless. Daniel’s big, brash, and strangely beautiful works are both cautionary, yet hopeful, in that their protagonists demonstrate the will to adapt and survive. The works show, too, the resilience of nature, in which plants and flowers threaten to overrun the canvases. It is possible that our planet will become inhospitable to human life, but nature will find a way to survive.

Melanie Daniel was born in Victoria, British Columbia, and is based in Tel Aviv, Israel. She exhibits her art internationally, recently in exhibitions in the U.S., Canada, Israel, and Sweden. Among her recent awards are a Pollock-Krasner Grant and a New York Foundation for the Arts Grant, and in 2009 Daniel was awarded a solo exhibition for the Tel Aviv Museum of Art’s Rappaport Prize for a Young Israeli Artist. She is currently the Padnos Distinguished Visiting Artist/​Professor at Grand Valley State University, Grand Rapids, Michigan, where she teaches a course in advanced painting. She is also collaborating with C.A. Frost Environmental Science Academy and Urban Roots community garden on projects related to climate change and the environment.

Installation Photography