
Paul Stolper is pleased to announce Grace O'Connor's new exhibition entitled 'Trinkleyville'. In these paintings she portrays the post adolescent males who lived in an area of her hometown, Waterbury, Connecticut, USA, which she christened 'Trinkleyville' in homage to a boy named Jimmy Trinkley. This mythical neighborhood was populated with local boys who hung together in gangs and remained aloof except from those allowed into their group.
Although not classically handsome, they
typify the look of the late 80's ‘metal
dude’. However through her use of exaggerated
background colour, together with the
pose and swagger adopted by the sitters
from 'Trinkleyville' Grace’s paintings elevates
them from regular boys to Pop icons.
By painting their portrait she accords
them a status that reflects their importance
and stance among their peers, albeit
in small town America. By painting portraits
of the boys from Trinkleyville Grace
enhances their mythical qualities, and
captures the sitters at their most aspirational,
when dreams are still real possibilities.
The paintings transform their image,
from what might have remained as photographic
snapshots into ‘works of art’. Historically
the portrait painting was commissioned
to record the achievements of someone
well known and important, and they would
be painted surrounded by the objects
that reflected their importance; books,
globes, jewels, furs, etc. Similarly
in Trinkleyville the boys are painted
with symbols that reflect their lives
and aspirations; guitars, rock ‘n’ roll
t-shirts, packs of cigarettes carefully
tucked t-shirts.
These are boys who still might make it
big in a band, who might escape their
hometown and travel the world.
Worshipped from afar like the images of celebrity from the early covers of Andy Warhol's 'Interview' magazine, these boys are candy-coloured romantic visions of youth and manhood, and they reflect the absolute power they held in Trinkleyville. In Trinkleyville these boys were famous and important, especially to young impressionable girls. Much like films such as ‘American Grafitti’ or ‘The Last Picture Show’, they are coming of age paintings that speak of an innocence that has yet to be tarnished.
The sublime landscape tradition of American art conveys a longing which is at the heart of these works. Through significantly personal locations from her hometown the boys are linked with nature in a romanticized form most notably in 'Devotion' which was inspired by the love poems that Orlando pinned to the trees in dedication to the object of his desire Rosalind in Shakespeare's 'As you like it'.
For more information and images please contact Lucy Emslie or Liz Glassenbury at the gallery
Gallery opening times Wednesday – Saturday 10am – 6pm
