"Meat Dream"
Taylor White
19 January - 15 March, 2024

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

Meat Dream, solo exhibition by Taylor White. Installation view at L21 Home, 2024.

A Red House (High Vibration), 2022

Oil stick on canvas

76 x 72 in

A House Moving West In Daylight, 2022

Oil stick on canvas

64 x 54 in

House, Rocks, 2022

Oil stick on canvas

64 x 54 in

Out West East, 2023

Acrylic and oil stick on canvas

75 x 64 in

Arrival / Departure, 2023

Oil stick on canvas

64 x 54 in

X Ray, 2023

Acrylic and oil stick on canvas

72 x 84 in

I Can Feel It Coming, 2023

Acrylic and oil stick on canvas

72 x 84 in

I Can Feel It Kicking In, 2023

Acrylic and oil stick on canvas

72 x 84 in

You Dont Know Anything About Potatoes, 2023

Acrylic, spray paint, oil stick, and wax crayon on canvas

72 x 84 in

Black Ops, 2023

Acrylic, oil, oil stick, and wax crayon on canvas

76 x 72 in

There Isn’t Time, 2023

Acrylic, spray paint, oil stick, and wax crayon on canvas

68 x 84 in

Undercover Cop, 2023

Oil stick, oil, and wax crayon on canvas

76 x 72 in

Taylor White’s inaugural solo exhibition in Spain, titled “Meat Dream” serves as an ode to non-structure.

 

In this recent body of work, we encounter unstable houses, and vibrating office chairs – transforming these archetypes into complex, movement-desperate structures, reminiscent of sculptural images.

 

As we look at the paintings we can envision the frantic process of drawing, this immediate urge to draw directly onto the canvas, leaving everything there in a raw and unfiltered form.

 

The “images” are recognizable, we know the house, the chair, all of these naïve models of our upbringing. The use of familiar symbols renders them identifiable but the strength and depth make them distinct. White’s intuitive approach to drawing makes an alteration to the proportions, due to the fast-pace, time-limited dynamic way of painting.

 

The work conveys in a palpable feeling of being “on edge”, caught in a dichotomy of panic and euphoria. In the drawings we perceive the compression, the urgency of producing that is apparent in every series. The overlaying of drawings creates a sense of perpetual motion that increases the paradoxical spectrum of feelings.

 

As we begin to complete this body of work it prompts us to question the underlying emotions associated with these archetypes.  Do we feel the same towards a house? Towards a chair? What do these symbols truly represent in our current societal landscape?

 

When approaching, adapting and restructuring these archetypes, a new layer meaning emerges – Through a dark-humored perspective to these all-time known prototypes, we find simplicity and immerse ourselves to cancel out the external influences.

 

In an interview, the artist revealed that when he started painting the art took over his home, making him relocate. It is this sensation of urgency that echoes strongly throughout his artworks, evoking a feel of immediacy and intensity. In the same interview White admitted to being intimidated by color theory and art principles initially, but then it changed when he started to rely on intuition. And this proposal is shown today.”

 

Zé Ortigão

EN / ES