Works from
An Invitation to Mercy
curated by Alison Alstrom
with SF painters Alison Alstrom, Deirdre White and Rommel Romo

Entire show currently on view by appointment at Bane Gallery
65 Capp Street
San Francisco, CA 94103

Taxidermy pheasant lying in front of a grey-blue background
Taxidermy pheasant on a blue table against an orange wall
White woman with glasses and hair pulled back, facing the viewer holding a taxidermy pheasant
Partially decomposed crow on a table next to an off-white wall
Crow skull on an off-white background
Partially decomposed crow on a grey-blue background
Crow skull on an off-white background

Crow Skull

12x12

Oil on panel

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Notes about this work

In selected paintings from an ongoing series, a broken pheasant taxidermy acts as stand-in protagonist in an exploration of vulnerability and intimacy, crossed boundaries and relinquished ones, and persistence or collapse in the wake of failure and loss. Also included here are studies for a work-in-progress in which the remains of a crow found on the side of the road serves in an investigation of culpability in anonymous suffering.

I first started painting dead birds a long time ago when my cat brought a dead robin into my apartment. I didn’t wonder about it at the time, but made study after study, reveling in its complicated beauty. When someone challenged my use of the bird, asked if it was mere exploitation, I began to insert myself, actual or implied, into the paintings as a way to better understand my affinity. One thing I learned is that if I look closely enough, there is beauty in form itself, or maybe the beauty is in the attention paid. I’m still asking those questions. These paintings look back to that earlier work.