Katy Moran











Encountering this Stockport-born artist's paintings is an almost synaesthetic experience; their thick, luscious layers of creamy paint look good enough to eat. Moran, who completed her MA at the Royal College of Art, uses oval canvases and almost floral imagery suggestive of 18th-century French painting, but the fluidity of the composition and the use of recurring forms - an oval 'dish' of colour, like an artist's palette, in the centre of the work, for instance - frustrate an easy reading.

(ArtReview, 2005)

After tantalizing appearances in group shows, Katy Moran’s first New York solo affirms the young British artist’s talent for evocative abstraction. The paintings are rife with apparent contradictions: They’re small in scale yet best viewed from a distance; misty veils of white shroud the subject matter, and titles may mislead more than enlighten. Moran’s approach occasionally feels like a self-conscious gambit, but it keeps viewers guessing long enough to come to provocative conclusions.

Most canvases display the artist’s brushy, layered style and earthy, cool color palette, yet the mood of each comes as a fresh surprise. Lucas is an ethereal cascade of blue and white that could be a waterfall, a hazy beach or a snowstorm. Alarming splashes of blood red dot a dark oval form that might be a boat or an open grave in Volestere. Light paint daubed over dark in the show’s most dramatic piece suggests a battlefield at night, though the title, Wasabi Without Tears, turns the painting into a funny take on highbrow culinary machismo.

Other canvases distill the essence of different moments in the art-historical canon: A cow’s head emerges from a patchwork of Futurist volumes; elsewhere, a De Kooning–esque crone is rendered in dark Cubist colors; while in a third painting, a rough sailboat shape in a light-toned setting recalls a Dutch harborscape. Occasionally, Moran’s jumble of forms fails to materializes into anything meaningful, and her grungy color schemes can be garish. This is rare. Instead, the work convincingly stakes Moran’s painterly territory: historically astute with a dash of humor, making nods to Karen Kilimnik’s romanticism and to Cecily Brown’s jittery fluidity, while possessing an energy all its own.

—Merrily Kerr for TIMEOUT NY

April 9, 2008