
Lauren Rice’s CUT IT LOOSE opens at ada gallery on November 7th, featuring a new series of works on paper that live at the intersection of painting, drawing, and sculpture.
Rice’s approach to painting is idiosyncratic and her paintings incorporate all manner of found and fabricated materials. The cutout is a fundamental aspect of the work in CUT IT LOOSE, a deliberate, repetitive, and labor-intensive act of removal that at once builds the structure of her paintings while simultaneously threatening their destruction. The paintings in CUT IT LOOSE are on the brink of falling apart and are evocative of other collapsing structures, from supernovae to political and social upheaval. Both absorbing and rejecting the baggage of modernist abstract painting, Rice’s paintings incorporate uneven grids, poured swaths of paint, holes and rips, as well as layered bits and pieces that hang off of the painting. Elements of woven and knotted thread are used in the attempt to hold the painting together both literally and aesthetically.
These paintings are both surface and object, as well as a ritual that measures time. Obsession, accident and chance are Rice’s companions in the painting process. In a world that is increasingly screen-based, the errors of the hand are paramount. Each drip, tear, and cut is a tiny testament to small acts of perseverance and exuberance, however imperfect, however fleeting. The cutouts transform the paper from a surface into a porous, three-dimensional object, allowing for ephemeral interactions with light and shadow. Color schemes on the paintings’ versos cast reflective color, breaking boundaries between artwork and wall. Adorned with friendship bracelets and a paint application akin to tie-dye, the paintings in CUT IT LOOSE may recall 70’s psychedelia, but beneath the surface they are spiritually punk.