Double Portrait

A solo exhibition by Em Rooney.

 

The artist's multimedia practice is anchored in a study of film, photography, and the material indices of these seemingly ephemeral, auratic genres. Earlier iterations of her work can be seen in sculptural containers framing analogue photographs, the images deliberately pedestrian and yet narratively opaque, invoking a sense of everyday mystery. Working with industrial materials, which engage tactility and imply a substantive weight to their contents, Rooney’s pieces expose and revere the experiential worlds of women and girls. 


"There’s a small conceptual leap between women in fiction and woman as fiction," says Ashton Cooper in his introduction to an interview with the artist for Artforum. Rooney falls precisely within this leap, creating and pulsating with vibrant, colorful materials, playing with tactility and space to create her own imagery. The sculptures’ titles featured in this show are taken from, "Planetarium," a poem by Adrienne Rich, which aptly describes Rooney's process: 


I am an instrument in the shape   

of a woman trying to translate pulsations   

into images for the relief of the body   

and the reconstruction of the mind.


Double Portrait will be Rooney's first show that does not directly display photographs for the matter. Her sculptural forms retain symbolic traces of images, derived, for example, from a catalogue of equestrian harnessing or formally tethered to films such as ‘Amarcord’ by Federico Fellini or ‘The Conversation’ by Francis Ford Coppola.


Exploring the interplay between image and sculpture, considered mostly unrelated practices, Rooney creates personal fictions, narrations that combine fragments of her own life, films, and their relation to women and their bodies. Held by a metal spine, the artists give life to forms crafted from fragments of femininity; sexuality, flowers as vulvas, adornment, beads, silk and elegance infuse Rooney’s process and are ambiguously intertwined.