Using brushwork, light, and balance, the artist captures moments within her personal history, such as her time working on Alaskan fishing boats and memories of surfing in Mexico. Her works primarily originate from within themselves, but she also sources imagery from old family photographs. Her oil paint compositions center on ethereal, gestural, and genderless figures within expansive, disparate landscapes. While some appear more clearly, other figures are defined by lyrical swathes of paint suggesting a face and the outline of a body. Manning purposefully leaves the origin, gender, and raison d’être of the forms within her paintings up to interpretation, allowing the viewer to step into her world, yet form their own reading of the work. The resulting powerful works vibrate with energy and light, flickering before the viewer’s eyes.
When Manning eventually incorporates color, [her work] begins through a hierarchy of refracted light. She grinds pure pigments with safflower oil and starts with a Sumi-e-like wash using broad chip brushes and paint rollers to create thin but wide strokes along. While still wet, she takes a rag and begins to pull the composition out by wiping and ripping away saturated areas. Eventually sketching in paint with loaded brushes, she reiterates or shifts the composition. Each layer is separated with a slightly thicker layer of safflower and walnut oil to refract light, a technique common with Dutch Baroque painters, such as Johannes Vermeer. Orchestrating ethereal sketches of landscapes and figures, she balances delicate whirlwinds of color with a contemporary feminist sense of humor. Manning’s works feel simultaneously thin and radiant, light glowing from within the paintings themselves.
Recent solo exhibitions of Manning’s work include Kylie Manning: Aftermath, Sabines Museum of Contemporary Art, Tuxtla Gutierrez; Kylie Manning: Waldeinsamkeit, KN Gallery, Berlin; and Kylie Manning: Zweisamkeit – Being in Two Is No More Than Doubled Solitude, Anonymous Gallery, New York. Her work is held in numerous collections worldwide including the Columbus Museum of Art; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; X Museum, Beijing; and Yuz Museum, Shanghai.
[excerpted from Pace website: www.pacegallery.com]