Garth Greenan Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition of recent work by Franklin Williams, made between 2020 and 2023. Opening Thursday, March 7, 2024, the exhibition is the artist’s first solo show in New York.
The large selection of work on view is striking given the complexity and palpable focus in each canvas. Mining a rich cache of personal and cultural history, the subject matter ranges from mysterious portraits to archeological vessels and Raggedy Anne dolls. Williams’s childhood remains a potent source of inspiration for his work: raised in a family of craftspeople, he learned to sew from an early age and witnessed the creation of handmade quilts, handkerchiefs, and placemats that filled his home. The practice of sewing has been consistent in Williams’s work, at times featuring canvas stitching as orderly as a tailor’s while in other moments allowing untrimmed threads to splay out like the fibers of a shag carpet. Occasionally the stitching surprises, weaving a doily, handkerchief, or element of collage into the picture plane as confidently as any area of paint.
In this spirit, a wide variety of mark making reveals an intuitive and athletic sense of play in the paintings’ construction. Forms are scaled up, down, spun around, and repositioned. Lyrical shapes echoing microorganisms and floral blooms comingle with complex geometries and hints of representation. Delighting in the eroticism of the human form, ancient crafts, and childhood memories, Williams’s works are both intensely singular and universal in their scope. This is art made with an unmistakable joy, with an unrelenting fervor for living and making that has only been strengthened by time.
While Williams was still a student, the critic John Coplans gave the young artist a vote of confidence that helped set the course of his career. When Coplans saw Williams’s strange, intensely patterned drawings, he remarked, “this is who you are.” (The episode culminated in the pair launching Williams’s early forays into Abstract Expressionism off the San Francisco Bay Bridge.) Just a few years after Coplans’s pivotal input, Williams was included in Peter Selz’s landmark 1967 exhibition, Funk, at the University Art Museum at University of California, Berkeley. However, in line with Coplans’s imperative, Williams has consciously and persistently maintained his distance from any group identification or categorization. Perhaps due to this steadfast idiosyncrasy and commitment to the studio as a sacred place, his intricate, vibrant work has sustained a unique resonance throughout the decades.
WORK
To make art is to sing with the human voice,
the voice I need is the voice I already have,
revealing the light of my mind through the
ordinary work of my art,
engaging the issues that matter to me,
getting on with my work,
with only my self to fall back on,
I consistently keep after it,
through a sense of certainty.
---
I WILL NOT TRIM MY LIFE TO FIT YOUR FRAME.
THROUGH WORK
WE DEFINE OUR SELF
AND UPON OUR WORK
WE LEAVE OUR IMAGE
PAINTER AND POET
MUST FALL IN LOVE
WITH THEIR OWN CREATION
IN LOVE WITH SOLITUDE
AND THE BEAUTY OF THE WORLD
I WILL CONTINUE TO STRUGGLE
ENDLESSLY
TOWARD PERFECTION
-Franklin Williams
Williams has been the subject of over 34 solo exhibitions at prestigious venues such as: Parker Gallery (2022, 2019, 2017, Los Angeles); Sonoma County Art Museum (2017, Santa Rosa); and the Crocker Art Museum, (2005, Sacramento). His work has also featured in many group shows, including With Pleasure: Pattern & Decoration in American Art 1972–1985 (2019, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; 2021, Hessel Museum of Art); Less is a Bore: Maximalist Art and Design (2019, ICA Boston); Downtown Painting (2019, Peter Freeman Inc., New York); and Nut Art (2017, Parker Gallery).
Williams’s work is featured in numerous public collections including: the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Museum of Contemporary Art (Los Angeles); the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; the Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art (Logan, UT); the Oakland Museum of California; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (Philadelphia); and the San Jose Museum of Art, among others.