DC Moore Gallery is pleased to present recent paintings by Eric Aho, who explores the natural world in visions mediated by human memory, introspection, imagination, and history. More broadly, Aho explores our tenuous ability to represent things seen, remembered, and embellished by our minds. "As he sees it," Diana Tuite writes in the catalogue essay, "his task is to present immediacy remembered, to reconcile directness with introspection. How might the experience of the painting reciprocate the experience of that which it depicts?" His paintings suggest that imaginative flourishes and digressions are more vital and interesting than a supposedly accurate, "objective" rendering of a lived experience.
In recent years, Aho has reinvented his process by abandoning plein-air painting in favor of the studio. As his physical practice moved indoors, so did his thoughts turn inward, to the way that distance, memory, and analysis affect our ability to recreate a fleeting moment-namely, an experience outdoors. As a result, Aho's paintings convey the discrepancy between the vibrancy of a single moment, the vagaries of memory, and the indulgences of the imagination. Any vista is only ever observed in brief, and in parts-between the blinks of our eyes-and yet we can fill in the whole by using our past experiences as well as, in the case of Aho's paintings, hundreds of years of art. Aho's works tap into the particular beauty of an instant as well as the weight of personal and collective history on our interpretations of our surroundings.Image: Eric Aho, CANADA, 2013. Oil on linen, 48 x 60 in.
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