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Anne Harris: "They Start With Me..."

Posted: 04/17/2011 10:13 pm

Artist Anne Harris has built her reputation as a painter of women who transfix their viewers with projections of uncomfortable and uncanny emotional states. Each of her paintings is a paradox, a challenge, a chimera, and to some degree a self-portrait.

"They start with me -- often -- and are from me in some respect," Harris explains, "but in the end, they become themselves. They're portraits of the people in the paintings." The resulting "people" are born from the artist's discomfort.

"I am incredibly self conscious," says Harris, "I am not a comfortable person." Although Harris, who recently turned 50, can be self-deprecating, her point has to be taken seriously. Her paintings are, in some way or another, about her struggle to get to the root of the anxiety while also attempting to shield herself from it. They tend to take their viewers on quite a ride.

Some of Harris' most memorable paintings of the 1990s were nude self-portraits that suggested a haunting vulnerability and ripeness. Pregnancy, always a nervous time, accounted for only part of the work's susceptibility. Harris, who is characteristically honest, used the process of painting itself to explore subtle ways that she could make what at first appeared vulnerable opaque.

2011-04-06-anneharris5.jpg


Second Portrait with Max, 1996-7
Oil on canvas, 46 1/8" x 30"

To put it another way, Harris is an expert in playing a game of paradoxically revealing and hiding: the result is the art. " If it really works it should go beyond my original intention and take on its own life, " says Harris about her process, "That's when I am done with it."

Harris insists that it is up to viewers to bring their own meanings to the work: "They are never wrong," she states. If her paintings are, in her own mind, " mesmerizing, hypnotic, emotionally complicated, and difficult" she has done her job.

In the past decade, Harris has been hard at work developing chameleonic series of paintings of women who channel a panoramic range of emotional nuance. The most surprising thing about them -- as varied as they at first appear -- is that they are also self portraits. It took Harris by surprise when the author of a catalog essay for her 2003 Exhibition at Bowdoin College -- "Without Likeness: Paintings by Anne Harris" -- referred to some of her subjects as "invented adolescents."

"I was shocked," Harris recalls, "I hadn't thought that at all: they were all starting from myself."

2011-03-31-blonde.jpg


Portrait (Blonde), 2003
Oil on Linen, 12" x 12"


Harris recalls her childhood, during which her family constantly moved, as being all over the place. "It went sort of like this," Harris recounts, "... born in Cleveland, then 2 yrs in Syracuse, 2 yrs. near Phoenix, AZ (Williams Air Force Base), 2 more yrs in Syracuse, 6 years in Tucson, AZ, 4 years in Morehead, KY. Although I see that only adds up to 16 years; my parents made some short moves when I was a toddler that I don't remember."

She wound up attending college in St. Louis, at Washington University, and then earned her MFA Degree in Art at Yale, graduating in 1988. While teaching in Maine she met her husband, photographer Paul d'Amato, and gave birth to her son Max in 1995. Shows in New York, Boston and New Mexico helped firm up her reputation, and critics often grouped her with other artists testing new approaches to self-portraiture and "partial self-portraiture" including Julie Heffernan and Lisa Yuskavage.

Everything changed for Harris when she and her family moved to Chicago in early 2001. "I was pining for New England," she states, "Moving was hard." Painting came to a halt, and Harris found her momentum again through drawing, which she devoted herself to exclusively for more than a year and a half. In 2006 a bracing cross section of 86 "drawings," which included mixed-media experiments with watercolor, oil and graphite, were tacked to the wall of the Neilsen Gallery in Boston.

2011-03-31-drawoutofahole53.jpg


How to Draw Yourself Out of a Hole, #53, 2005
Water color, oil, graphite on mylar over paper, 12" x 10"


After executing several hundred drawings, Harris found herself productive at the easel again, and several important shows followed. In a group show titled "Beyond Likeness," held in 2007 at the North Dakota Museum of Art, and curated by Laurel Reuter, Harris showed a total of nearly 200 drawings and paintings. A solo show at Alexandre Gallery in New York -- also in 2007 -- consisted of mainly drawings along with two paintings.

In the past few years, Harris has referred to the subjects of many of her paintings as "invisibles." A few, like her "Portrait" of 2007 are "Middle-Aged Angels."

"I have been looking in the mirror," Harris acknowledges, "In the mirror it is all myself." The resulting images, characteristically, are someone and something else. In many cases the painting is "...its own entity: I don't even know how it got there."

2011-03-31-2ndangel.jpg


Portrait (2nd Angel), 2007
Oil on linen, 44" x 30"

Props -- a string of mardi-gras pearls, an antique dress, a bathrobe -- are devices that Harris uses to help a painting gain momentum. They can be important because they are more constant and tangible than the female figures themselves, who tend to morph during the painting process. In "Portrait (Pink)" from 2010 the carefully rendered patterns of a pale sheath dress provide the counterpoint to an amber eyed "invisible" who seems to waver and waste into the painting's toned ground.


2011-03-31-pink.jpg


Portrait (Pink), 2010
Oil on linen, 44" x 30"

Few painters today, male or female, are courageous enough to present themselves as Harris does in her work in progress "Red Robe." Frowsy, fright-wigged -- even possessed -- it shows us a Medusa who confronts, disorients and challenges us. If Harris is willing to claim the emotions and images suggested by this painting, she is a step closer to Goya than any other artist working today.


2011-03-31-redrobe.jpg


Portrait (Red Robe) Detail -- in progress
Oil on Linen

Then again, "Red Robe" isn't a painting that anyone should read as "meaning" anything: Harris herself is clear about that when it comes to reading her work. Her job as an artist was to give birth to the image, not to tell us what it means. Miles Unger, who wrote about Harris in 1997, put it this way:

"As our gaze is fixed by the helpless figure on the canvas, the artist slips out the back door, empowered, redeemed, through the very act of painting."
2011-04-07-anne_harris_studio.jpg

Anne Harris: Photo by Terry Evans

Anne Harris is represented by the Alexandre Gallery, New York.

 
 
 

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Artist Anne Harris has built her reputation as a painter of women who transfix their viewers with projections of uncomfortable and uncanny emotional states. Each of her paintings is a paradox, a chall...
Artist Anne Harris has built her reputation as a painter of women who transfix their viewers with projections of uncomfortable and uncanny emotional states. Each of her paintings is a paradox, a chall...
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
mxytsplyk
De gustibus non est disputandum
10:23 PM on 04/25/2011
An amazingly gifted artist.

ʻIf Harris is willing to claim the emotions and images suggested by this painting, she is a step closer to Goya than any other artist working today.ʻ

How lucky for us, then!
02:51 PM on 04/25/2011
John, thank you so much. You write with much subtlety. I couldn't ask for more.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
John Seed
Arts blogger
04:23 PM on 04/25/2011
My day is made. Anne, this blog taught me something about what I need to do when putting together future blogs. I need to find artists as good as you -- tough, but they are out there, right? -- and keep the blogs right on course. I tend to ramble, but somehow when writing about you and your work I knew when to quit, and let Miles Unger have the final say.
09:16 PM on 04/25/2011
Thank you! I can think of several artists whose praises I'd like to sing. You are in an enviable position--getting to sing, I mean. It's courageous to write.
09:21 PM on 04/25/2011
And I really liked Mile's quote at the end. Also, I should mention, the Bowdoin catalog essay was written by Allison Ferris. She was right, about them being teenagers I mean. Funny that I didn't know that.
03:22 PM on 04/24/2011
Had a chance to see "Portrait w/ Max 2" in a private collection. Hauntingly beautiful work.
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millebocca
veni, vidi, clicki
09:29 PM on 04/20/2011
grotesque beauty, beautiful grotesque
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MNTom
04:24 PM on 04/20/2011
The works are very similar to Paul Cadmus' work called "The 7 Deadly Sins". Both confront people's pyche and are beautiful and shocking at the same time.
12:50 PM on 04/20/2011
stunning work and an eloquent article - thank you!
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Me atlast
Live, love, paint
10:44 PM on 04/19/2011
Bravo, beautiful work, thanks for the inspiring piece....

Give me a couple years, maybe I'll be interesting enough... It's a hard thing to let go and let your insides paint... just starting to learn how to do that.... I am untrained...

www.m-jones.com
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anna JD
Special Effects Art Photographer & Researcher
12:36 PM on 04/19/2011
I wish I could say how wonderful it was to read this clear, concise and illuminating writing and to see these astonishing reproductions. Anne Harris is obviously one of the finest if not the finest portraiture artist we have in this country, in my opinion, she is the one. The existential angst and or lunacy of Portrait (Red Robe), the sheer transparent beauty of Portrait (Pink) - haven't those of us who love art waited a very long time for this kind of brilliant painting? I know one thing and that is, I feel as though, I will never be the same after seeing this work. I have a sense of pride today that the artist is a woman. Her work is thrilling to say the least.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
John Seed
Arts blogger
02:22 PM on 04/19/2011
My problem now is to find other artists as good as Anne to write about. Wish me luck!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Anna JD
Special Effects Art Photographer & Researcher
12:24 PM on 04/19/2011
Form and content, the artist and the analysis of her work presented here is so distinctly wonderful, I am amazed reading this piece. I have seen Anne Harris' work in passing, somewhere rushing around Facebook or Twitter and now this, a much more beautiful and beautifully written introduction.

For my part, it is superflous that this artist is art degreed from Yale - Pablo Picasso did not attend Yale or Harvard and, he managed so much after all. God bestows genius not the Ivy League although, in this case, they obviously have one that has done them proud.

HuffPost continues to astonish me with art criticism and analysis from such top notch Bloggers as, John Seed and Anis Shivani. I'm honored and thrilled to be a part of the arts community here at HuffPost.

A shout out of thanks and appreciation to Anne Harris and John Seed. You do us proud.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
John Seed
Arts blogger
10:37 PM on 04/19/2011
All I can say is "WOW."

well, also, "thank you."
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
CrestedSparrow
12:03 PM on 04/19/2011
She's a genius. Now this IS art.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kansasbashkir
"Take the time that it takes..."
09:24 AM on 04/19/2011
Absolutely riveting! Thank you so much for posting this article.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
John Seed
Arts blogger
02:21 PM on 04/19/2011
You are so welcome.
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Red45
We can turn the tide
11:30 PM on 04/18/2011
Wow. Fascinating paintings. Out of the box.
06:23 PM on 04/18/2011
this is beautifully intense work... lumininous paint handling and psychological insight and synmpathy of a type all too rarely seen
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blitznstitch
BAZINGA!!!
05:45 PM on 04/18/2011
looks like demons with a weird angelic glow...i could not hang these anywhere, there is a reason why naked statutes and drawings depict the ideal body type
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paintio
And I guess that I just don't know...
05:41 PM on 04/18/2011
Stunning
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Querent
I just had to say that.
11:50 PM on 04/18/2011
You were right, Paintio. I contemplated one of those Rothkos for an hour, and I saw all kinds of things in it that I didn't see with a superficial glance. His work is art, and all of those nasty things I said about him were wrong. I didn't experience deep emotion as a result of contemplation, but I found a degree of complexity and statement that I didn't know was there. You broadened my world. Thank you.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Paintio
And I guess that I just don't know...
12:30 AM on 04/19/2011
I so appreciate that, I feel a little good right now, thank you for getting back to me. Many of them are quite large. And certainly most moving in person.
There is a building built for a particular series in Houston www.rothkochapel.org, that I hope to see some day.
He is among my favorite 10 or 20 painters.