Barnaby Whitfield

Modern Living Room With Billiards Table, 2019
Digital photograph
Dimensions variable

JED WEBSTER SMITH

Born 1970, Miami
Lives and works in Brooklyn, New York

Barnaby Whitfield’s works are at once hopelessly romantic and urgently contemporary, simultaneously drawing inspiration from Rococo era portraiture and contemporary fashion advertising.

His work is seamlessly weaving Old-Master quotations with images sifted spontaneously from internet sources, creating a result loaded with inside jokes belonging to our twenty-first-century psyche.

Whitfield’s characters are rendered in gorgeously soft and dreamy chalk pastel or oil paint, their bodies glowing with eerie internal light, but perversely marred with sickly hues that allude to bruising, rotting, sweltering flesh. Something menacing seems to have a grip on these pastel beauties and the narrative clues are compellingly composed to allow the viewer partial access, but ultimate suspense.

The indecipherability of Whitfield’s highly personal symbolism begins to break down as clues to the artist’s appropriations surface, illuminating the development of his personal artistic vocabulary. He has placed his characters into a bizarre contextual universe of his uniquely singular imaging, where women balloon out of scattered spermata and the laws of the land are dictated by an unashamed phallocentrism.

A bubbling, rainbow-hued life force often emanates from behind to lift the subject’s presence, giving physicality to the artist’s childlike fascination with love and horror. Within this constructed context, he questions his role as a contemporary artist, casting himself sometimes as the jester with a jealousy complex. The Hero and the whore.

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