Images from a 2009 fundraising edition for Printed Matter: a small-format photo album, whose pockets are filled with forty-three separate removable black and white photographic c-prints (4 x 6" ea.), taken by Scott Treleaven in the Cimitero Monumentale in Milan. The cemetery is unusual in that the statuary exhibit such highly varied, yet universally tender depictions of mourning. A signed and numbered signature card is inserted in each photo album.
https://www.printedmatter.org/catalog/25952/
‘New Pagan Paintings’ - opens April 1 at Cooper Cole [West Gallery]
Little Gods Again (2023) oil on canvas, 9 x 6”
Very grateful to the extraordinary Derek McCormack for the exhibition text below: “Deathly - this is how flower paintings struck Treleaven for the longest time - the flowers under duress, their viewers under duress to value them. He was interested in dispersing this duress, so he started painting flowers himself, and this show features the nasturtiums, sunflowers, geraniums and morning glories that captured him. "I turned to flowers," he says, "to find out what made me resist painting them." There are nine paintings in 'New Pagan Paintings,' all finished in the last few years. The blooms are what you'll notice first, then the light: light's shining on them and light seems to be shining from them. They're alive - it’s animism, though that's not the point of the paintings; it's the starting point. If he grants that flowers have spirits, then what spirit will they grant him? If they have spirit, then surely part of their spirit is perverse. These paintings are pagan in that they're full of a particular spirit: petalled and petulant, hermaphroditic and horny - to me, they suggest what we might get if Joe Brainard paintings buggered Charles Burchfield paintings - paradise! These are cultured flowers with the souls of wildflowers or weeds. When he started painting them a few years ago, he realized that they'd been lurking for a long time. Even in his previous body of work - in his Jewel/Galaxy paintings, he'd drawn flowers on his canvases then painted over them, as if paint were soil, and as if every part of a flower were a seed. In 'New Pagan Paintings,' in these stellar paintings, flowers star: they swarm over the surface; indeed, they are the surface. I might also mention that there's also a painting of a berry, which shouldn't surprise any of Treleaven's admirers: everything in his work's fruity as fuck.” - Derek McCormack's most recent books are Castle Faggot (Semiotext(e)), a novel, and Judy Blame's Obituary (Pilot Press) a collection of essays on fashion and death.
Untitled (2020) Scott Treleaven
watercolour, collage, gouache on paper
41 x 31 cm
Scott Treleaven, Untitled (Venetian foyer / Roman rooftop) 2017
Torn prints from 35mm analog negatives, 6 x 4”, unique
Scott Treleaven Last Chance to See, 2017 Gouache, acrylic and panel collage on paper Diptych, 105.5 x 105.5 cm ea. panel
Scott Treleaven In Whatever Way Tames Whomsoever, 2017 Gouache, acrylic and panel collage on paper Diptych, 105.5 x 105.5 cm ea. panel
Scott Treleaven Animal Chapel, 2015 Triptych: pastel, gouache, gesso, house paint and collage on paper three panels; each panel 75 x 50.5″
Scott Treleaven Communication with Haight-Ashbury Flautist Seen in Book from 1968 (with Implied Ectoplasm), 2016 Gouache, pastel and collage on paper 73 x 49 inches
Scott Treleaven, ‘Untitled’, 2016 – ed. of 9 Diptych, soft ground etching with chine-collé 45.5 x 37 cm
http://poligrafa.net/artist.php?id=191