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Gabriela Vainsencher

Epic, Heroic, Ordinary

Presented with New Discretions

March 2 – April 15, 2023

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Mom 1, 2021-22

Porcelain and underglaze

96h x 144w in
243.84h x 365.76w cm

GV005

Detail of ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

DETAIL: Mom 1, 2021-22

Porcelain and underglaze

96h x 144w in
243.84h x 365.76w cm

GV005

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Bodytime, 2023

Porcelain, underglaze, acrylic

20h x 12w in
50.80h x 30.48w cm

GV014

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Fertility Cornucopia, 2023

Porcelain, glaze, underglaze

27.50h x 51w in
69.85h x 129.54w cm

GV013

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Hourglass, 2023

Porcelain, underglaze, glaze, acrylic

12.50h x 6.50w in
31.75h x 16.51w cm

GV015

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Three Muses of Flowing Abundance, 2023

Porcelain, glaze, underglaze, and acrylic

30h x 20w in
76.20h x 50.80w cm

GV012

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Epic, Heroic, Ordinary, 2023

Porcelain, glaze, underglaze, and acrylic

30h x 20w in
76.20h x 50.80w cm

GV011

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

SIDE VIEW: Epic, Heroic, Ordinary, 2023

Porcelain, glaze, underglaze, and acrylic

30h x 20w in
76.20h x 50.80w cm

GV011

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Blood Moon, 2022

Porcelain, glaze, and underglaze

12h x 12w in
30.48h x 30.48w cm

GV010

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

A Mother Determined, 2022

Porcelain, underglaze, gold ink

GV009

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Sea Mother, 2023

Porcelain, glaze, underglaze, acrylic

15.50h x 14w in
39.37h x 35.56w cm

GV008

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Why is it so quiet? (pink), 2022

Porcelain, glaze, and underglaze

12h x 11w in
30.48h x 27.94w cm

GV021

Sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Biological / Career Clock #1, 2023

Porcelain and underglaze

13.50h x 12w in
34.29h x 30.48w cm

GV016

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Biological / Career Clock #2, 2023

Porcelain and underglaze

11.50h x 11.25w in
29.21h x 28.58w cm

GV027

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Seer, 2023

Porcelain, underglaze, and glaze

24h x 23w in
60.96h x 58.42w cm

GV028

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Blue Jean Baby / Ear Goddess, 2022

Porcelain, stoneware, underglaze, and glaze

14h x 12w x 7d in
35.56h x 30.48w x 17.78d cm

GV022

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

The Patina of Old Forms, 2022

Porcelain, glaze, acrylic

12h x 9w x 7d in
30.48h x 22.86w x 17.78d cm

GV023

Ceramic sculpture by Gabriela Vainsencher

Gabriela Vainsencher

Veins like rivers like roots, 2022

Stoneware, glaze, underglaze, and oil paint

13.50h x 11.50w in
34.29h x 29.21w cm

GV007

Press Release

Opening Reception: Thursday March 2, 6-8pm

Asya Geisberg Gallery and New Discretions are pleased to present "Epic, Heroic, Ordinary", a solo exhibition by Gabriela Vainsencher.

You walk into an ancient ruin and there is a hideous creature, some sort of serpentine dragon slithering across the wall, flaunting a hideous tail and a tangle of arms, riddled with a myriad of ears. But wait, is that a frying pan? A tote bag? And on closer inspection, perhaps her head is not that of a Medusa, but that of a worried woman. And there are pacifiers, a toy, and maybe those talons are combing a child’s hair rather than wringing its neck.

Welcome to the world of Gabriela Vainsencher, where motherhood meets mythology. Her work is rich with allegory, pulling inspiration from heroic tales, ancient Greek ceramics and Roman frescoes, as well as her experience as a mother.

It all makes sense. Vainsencher has been referencing archaeology and anatomy for close to a decade. Her “Back Dirt” photographic series is all about the dig, and her previous ceramics, though abstract, have all been about the body.

The new work is a unique hybrid. Vainsencher employs a carved drawing method that gives her porcelain sculptures their close affinity to drawing. While the clay is still wet, she uses a sharp pin tool to free-hand carve her drawings into the clay, which allows the drawing line to be preserved in all its fluidity, and afterwards, she rubs pigmented underglazes into the grooves left by the pin tool. This process allows for mark-making that is between drawing, sculpture, and printmaking. The bodies, vessels and faces are then smudged, touched, and rubbed.

The centerpiece of the exhibition is “Mom”—a large-scale wall-hanging sculpture made out of 59 individual pieces of hand-sculpted, carved, and painted porcelain tiles. It documents her first year of pandemic parenting, a self-portrait of sorts. A snakelike creature made of nurturing breasts, listening ears, and hands—lots and lots of hands—doing all the mom things: fluffing a pillow, picking up a stuffed animal, cleaning, wiping, swiping, and feeding. It is the dragon mentioned above, turned nurturing and kind in mosaic form.

Vainsencher’s portraits don vase-like earrings. There’s a squid in one - a visual quote from the ancient Minoans, who worshiped the animal as a symbol of the sea, their giver of life. Vainsencher also celebrates the bounty of nature, but with a wary eye: her version of a cornucopia is more memento mori. It is a bowl full of fertility symbols: bursting ripe fruit, a stork, there’s even a fallopian tube in there. But there’s also an hourglass, perched precariously on the tip of the nose of a gasping fish, a reminder that time (for life, for having a baby) is always running out.

Her amphorae, one being the titular work of the exhibition, were inspired by the François Vase, the iconic example of Etruscan black-figure decoration of the 5th century BCE. But rather than boar hunting or lyre playing, we have child lugging, hair brushing, and sitting in silence. We have replaced the epic with the ordinary, but it remains heroic.

-- Benjamin Tischer, New Discretions