Corey Helford Gallery Presents: Zoé Byland "In the Presence of the Past"
ZOÉ BYLAND EXPLORES THE PAST’S ABILITY TO COLOR (OR GRAYSCALE) OUR PRESENT IN SOLO DEBUT SHOW AT COREY HELFORD GALLERY
Corey Helford Gallery is proud to premiere Swiss artist Zoé Byland’s newest solo show, In the Presence of the Past, opening Saturday, July 28 in Gallery Two. This is her first solo exhibition with the gallery. In 20 new black and white paintings, Byland explores the dance of influence that the past has on shaping the present, and the present has on reframing our memories.
Working with acrylic and airbrush on canvas, Byland’s paintings are steeped in the aesthetics of film noir, vintage photography, graphic novels and even super-heroes, with many of her characters shrouded in an aura of secrecy or actual disguise. All of her works have in some ways melded elements of traditional and contemporary art into works that are both classical and subcultural. With In the Presence of the Past, she’s exploring the way our society’s pre-occupation with nostalgia is coloring (or in the case of her work, grayscaling) our perceptions of the present.
“In my paintings I want to create moments that elude time and space, in which history and the present day are blended together,” says Byland. “We are always in the presence of the past. It always accompanies or surrounds us as a fluid dimension that flows into our present and mixes up our future. And while our memories affect our present choices and further alter the future, the past stays a place that we can’t return to. The past only exists in a selective, staged form, altered by memory.”
As we recreate old narratives, visuals and media in the present, these new works are altered and colored by the elements of what we’re currently experiencing, with symbols and aesthetics taking on a new life even as they can clearly hail from a long-gone era. “I combine elements that fit with the underlying atmosphere of the image I’m creating. I don’t deliberately choose symbols to convey a specific message, that part is up to the viewer,” explains Byland. “What I love about symbolism is that it can carry a story by speaking to deeper levels of perception and emotion, like dreams or fairy tales do. An image can be read in a variety of ways and I don't want to limit this spectrum of interpretation by applying specific meaning. Just like a good story, for me, a good painting needs an atmosphere that draws you in and defines the genre in which the narrative is taking place. I want to create a certain suspenseful, dreamlike and tense atmosphere in my paintings. In addition to a carefully crafted formal framework, drama and mise-en scène play a role as well.”
For the first time ever, Byland will be exhibiting a partially animated painting, complete with sound.
The opening reception for Zoé Byland’s In the Presence of the Past will be hosted Saturday, July 28 from 7pm - 11pm in Gallery Two. The reception is open to the public and the exhibit will be on view through September 1. The space is open Tuesday - Saturday, 12pm - 6pm. Corey Helford Gallery is located at 571 S. Anderson St. Los Angeles, CA 90033.
About Zoé Byland
Zoé Byland is a painter, based in Switzerland. She attended the F+F school for art and media design in Zurich and studied contextual painting at the academy of fine arts in Vienna (class of Muntean / Rosenblum, Prof. Elke Krystufek and Prof. Hans Scheirl). She studied art history and teached at an art school in Vienna. She lives and works in Bern.
About Corey Helford Gallery
Corey Helford Gallery (CHG) was first established in 2006 by Jan Corey Helford and her husband, television producer and creator, Bruce Helford (Anger Management, The Drew Carey Show, George Lopez, The Oblongs) and has since evolved into one of the premier galleries of New Contemporary art. Its goals as an institution are the support and growth of young and emerging, to well-known and internationally established artists, the production and promotion of their artwork, and the general production of their exhibits, events and projects.
CHG represents a diverse collection of international artists, primarily influenced by today’s pop culture and collectively encompassing style genres such as New Figurative Art, Pop Surrealism, Neo Pop, Graffiti and Street Art, and Post-Graffiti.
After nine years in Culver City, CHG relocated in December 2015 to a robust 12,000 square foot building in Downtown Los Angeles, where it continues to host exhibitions within the heart of the city’s art community. The current space boasts three separate galleries, each of which house individual artist and group exhibitions, whereas the main gallery offers 4,500 square feet, providing total immersion for its attendees. New exhibitions are presented approximately every five weeks. For more info and an upcoming exhibition schedule, visit oreyHelfordGallery.com and connect on Faceboo, Twitter and Instagram.