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Kristen Sanders

Protoself

June 1 – July 28, 2023

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Middle Paleo, 2022

Acrylic on canvas

60h x 40w in
152.40h x 101.60w cm

KS001

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Morning Tide, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

40h x 32w in
101.60h x 81.28w cm

KS003

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Abyssal Plane, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

27h x 20w in
68.58h x 50.80w cm

KS010

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

In the Negative Spaces, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

50h x 40w in
127h x 101.60w cm

KS004

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Earliest Interior, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

30h x 24w in
76.20h x 60.96w cm

KS006

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Shell/Tool, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

40h x 30w in
101.60h x 76.20w cm

KS005

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

One in the Other, 2020

Acrylic on canvas over wood panel

20h x 16w in
50.80h x 40.64w cm

KS009

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Shell, 2022

Acrylic on collaged canvas

16h x 12w in
40.64h x 30.48w cm

KS007

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Strange Presence, 2022

Acrylic on collaged canvas

40h x 32w in
101.60h x 81.28w cm

KS008

Painting by Kristen Sanders

Kristen Sanders

Primordial Feeling, 2023

Acrylic on canvas over wood panel

24h x 18w in
60.96h x 45.72w cm

KS002

Press Release

Asya Geisberg Gallery is proud to present “Protoself,” an exhibition of paintings by Kristen Sanders. This will be the gallery’s first solo presentation of the artist’s work. As the show’s title suggests, Sanders points her inquiry into the crux of what makes us human; imagining a moment of first consciousness of a hypothetical early human ancestor. Since 2015 her work has been circling between the extreme past of hominids millions of years ago – and the increasingly closer future of robots with super-human powers and artificial intelligence. Sanders’ fascination lies within the threshold of self-invention, distinguishing the human from both the animal and the animatronic. In considering the former, her work posits that behavioral aspects such as making a mark, or the first non-utilitarian artwork, should be valorized before corporeal evolution. By considering these defining moments for the pre-human, we can then reframe the post-human, negotiating our current unease with AI and its possible outpacing of the human body – arriving at a post-body consciousness.

Sanders transmits these themes in translucent overlapping layers, eradicating the linearity of time. Mannequins with mouths agape, eye-less masks, and wilted synthetic skins, some cast from the artist herself, pile on each other like so much quasi-human detritus. To these Surrealist tropes she adds shells, fossils, lines  carved in the sand, and primitive flint tools. The works vacillate between the imaginary touchstones of future and past, pondering who made the first mark, envisioning the instant power of creativity, communication, the thrill of the first handprint on the cave’s walls. Conflated with futuristic post-human symbols, certain paintings echo science fiction. Films such as Ex Machina, Under The Skin, and 2001: A Space Odyssey plumb similar themes, and the near-exact human replicas of Westworld and its narrative jumps through time are also brought to mind.

Sanders’ prior work held tightly to two or three colored combinations, positioning the work as symbolic, theoretical, or theatrical. In “Protoself,” the paintings indulge in a richer, more developed color range, with more exact rendering, and settings of naturalistic beachscape and sky. Having grown up around California beaches, Sanders finds rich parallels in that locus to her themes – a site of evolutionary emergence, as well as a washing up of detritus. Mysterious rock formations, the ebb and flow of the tide, sand formation, and fossils all demonstrate the flattening of eons of time. Each image could be a shout out to a future alien scholar of our world - uncanny, seemingly familiar, yet tantalizingly enigmatic – perhaps a message to the HAL of some other planet.