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Francesca Gabbiani

Vortex Flower (poppy), 2016

paper, gouache on canvas

36 x 40 x 1-5/8 inch

Vortex Flower (orange poppy), 2016

paper, gouache on canvas

36 x 40 x 1-5/8 inch

Vortex Flower (iris), 2016

paper, gouache on canvas

36 x 40 x 1-5/8 inch

Hearth the Opposite, 2016

watercolor, acrylic, paper, vellum on panel

11-7/8 x 8-15/16 x 1 inch

Le Fol Âtre, 2016

acrylic, gouache, ink, vellum, paper on panel

11-7/8 x 9-1/4 x 1 inch

Destruction of Radical Space (staircase), 2016

ink, watercolor, pencil, vellum on panel

10 x 8 x 1 inch

Ghost Rider, 2016

China ink, acrylic, vellum, paper on panel

9 x 11-7/8 x 1 inch

Destruction of Radical Space (desert house), 2016

acrylic, gouache, ink, paper on canvas

8 x 9-7/8 x 3/4 inch

Transparent Memory, 2016

acrylic, gouache, ink, vellum, paper on panel

9-3/16 x 12 x 1 inch

July 22 – September 10, 2016

Opening reception: Friday, July 22, 6-8 pm

Lora Reynolds is pleased to announce an exhibition of new collages by Francesca Gabbiani, the artist’s fifth show at the gallery.

Francesca Gabbiani’s newest body of work pits poisonous flowers against abandoned treehouses and mysterious fragments of disintegrating buildings.

Known for her colorful collages of many layers of intricately cut paper, Gabbiani has been experimenting with mounting her compositions to wood panels and stretched canvases. She is also using gouache to add a soft, watery dimension to the otherwise sharply defined forms in her work.

The new collage paintings reflect Gabbiani’s longstanding interests in architectural spaces, utopia, and peril hiding in plain sight, but only recently has Gabbiani begun connecting these interests with her teenage years in Geneva. Her relationship with her parents was mired in conflict, she repeatedly ran away from home, spent ten years squatting in abandoned buildings, and found a community of like-minded peers with similar pasts, artistic priorities, and anti-establishment ideals. In 1985 they formed a collective and called themselves État d’Urgences—State of Emergency.

The group saw their town as bereft of culture relevant to young people and set out to create a self-sustaining nonprofit arts center. They co-opted an unused four-story factory and turned it into a compound with an exhibition space, performance hall for rock concerts, stage for theater productions, a cinema, bar, restaurant, cabaret, and a slew of artist studios. After four years of illegally occupying the building, evading authorities, and organizing underground happenings, the City of Geneva officially legitimized their use of the old factory by granting them a rent-free lease.

As their space grew in popularity, the collective took on new members and the founding principles of État d’Urgences faded. The new generation prioritized drugs and debauchery over art and ideas. Gabbiani moved on. Friends died of overdoses or contracted HIV. Their utopia was lost.

Today, the space Gabbiani helped create is called L’Usine—the Factory—and is still a popular cultural destination in Geneva. Now that Gabbiani lives in Los Angeles, she wanders through the city, seeking out and photographing structures that have fallen into disuse and disrepair. These days she has a home and a family, but she never stops imagining what potential the abandoned spaces in LA might hold as platforms for the disillusioned idealists among us.

Francesca Gabbiani was born in Montreal in 1965, grew up in Geneva, and lives and works in Los Angeles. She has received the Swiss Federal Award of Art three times and had a mid-career retrospective at the Centre PasquArt (Switzerland). Gabbiani has exhibited at the Galleria d’Arte Moderna (Milan), Kunstverein Wolfsburg (Germany), Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles), Tucson Museum of Art (Arizona), and Underground Museum (Los Angeles). Her work is in the collections of the Hammer Museum (Los Angeles), Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York), Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles), and Museum of Modern Art (New York).