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Points of Distraction
Charlie Hudson
Part 1: March 31, 2021 - April 11, 2021
Part 2: April 16, 2021 - May 9, 2021

 

Ki Smith Gallery is pleased to announce Points of Distraction, a two-part exhibition of new sculptural paintings by Charlie Hudson, and featuring fellow artists Luke Ivy Price and Caslon Bevington as curatorial advisors. 

 

The exhibition begins with the first two week installation, opening March 31st. It highlights a suite of works inspired by Hudson's walks through New York City over the past year. In each piece, Hudson crafts geometric wood forms that mimic the lines of, say, a Williamsburg stoplight at 4:00 am, or the glare of the setting sun refracting off the glossy skyscrapers of Midtown. Impressionistic brushstrokes of acrylic and oil add new depths of field, creating abstracted tableaus of urban life — both remembered and imagined. Hudson's exploration of the cityscape culminates in the second installation, opening April 16th, where these disparate and distorted scenes are rearranged and mosaicked into an immersive, panoramic view of a single street corner.

 

Hudson’s studio pulsates with music from different eras as he paints, and he takes inspiration from the surrounding art books, their pages opened to Louise Nevelson’s wooden wall pieces, Monet’s garden portraits, and the incandescent dot painting of Aboriginal Australian artist Yannima Tommy Watson. These images and sounds seep into his textured depictions of the city, each work emerging as an energetic amalgam as diverse as New York City itself. 


Hudson describes this installation as an invitation to physically step inside the color-filled world he has long portrayed in his two dimensional paintings and murals, cheekily referencing when characters of the beloved late-90’s kids show Blue's Clues lept into pictures on their walls, exclaiming, “Blue-skidoo, we can too!” When exploring Points of Distraction, the individual works begin to melt together, transforming the gallery into a surreal stage in which the viewer becomes the star performer. The intentional lack of people in the work facilitates this transformation. Like a good host, Hudson’s work allows its guests to shine and doesn’t hog the conversation with didactic theories or narratives.

About Charlie Hudson

Charlie Hudson is an Australian-American artist who lives and works in New York City. Hudson layers playful brushstrokes and geometric forms to produce expressive, dream-like depictions of his surroundings. He approaches his serene rural landscapes and dazzling cityscapes like a master Impressionist, capturing the shifting light and movement of moment spent in each location. His sculptural constructions add new depths of field to each composition, providing the viewer with an immersive glimpse into Hudson’s experience of the world: “The paintings come to represent the feelings of being overwhelmed by the city, inspired by the city, and distracted by the city, ”(Juxtapoz, 2017).
 

Hudson’s work has been exhibited both nationally in New York, Miami, and Vermont, and internationally in Sydney, London, and Bali. In addition to his famed mural at the Burlington International Airport, Hudson’s public artworks can be found throughout New York City and around the world. During his time with Apostrophe NYC’s Base 12 Project, he participated in exhibitions at the Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA PS1, Coney Island’s Luna Park, Mana Contemporary, and the MTA’s Kosciuszko Street J train station. He currently shows with Ki Smith Gallery in New York City, as well as Soap Box Arts in Burlington, VT.

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