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Alex Heilbron
Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street, Dallas

Alex Heilbron
Alex Heilbron
Alex Heilbron, Apophenic

Alex Heilbron

Apophenic

2023

Installation view at 150 Manufacturing Street

Alex Heilbron, Flag I, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag I, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH021

Alex Heilbron, Flag I, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag I, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH021

Alex Heilbron, Depository, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Depository, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

84 x 63 x 2 in / 213.4 x 160 x 5.1 cm

AH022

Alex Heilbron, Depository, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Depository, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

84 x 63 x 2 in / 213.4 x 160 x 5.1 cm

AH022

Alex Heilbron, Expectations and results, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Expectations and results, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

84 x 63 x 2 in / 213.4 x 160 x 5.1 cm

AH023

Alex Heilbron, Expectations and results, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Expectations and results, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

84 x 63 x 2 in / 213.4 x 160 x 5.1 cm

AH023

Alex Heilbron, Flag II, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag II, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH024

Alex Heilbron, Flag II, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag II, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH024

Alex Heilbron, Flag III, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag III, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH025

Alex Heilbron, Flag III, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag III, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH025

Alex Heilbron, Flag IV, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag IV, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH026

Alex Heilbron, Flag IV, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag IV, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH026

Alex Heilbron, Flag V, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag V, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH027

Alex Heilbron, Flag V, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Flag V, 2023

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 54 in / 182.9 x 137.7 cm

AH027

Alex Heilbron, Fix, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Fix, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH028

Alex Heilbron, Fix, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Fix, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH028

Alex Heilbron, Fix II, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Fix II, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH029

Alex Heilbron, Fix II, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Fix II, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH029

Alex Heilbron, Freak certinty, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Freak certinty, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH030

Alex Heilbron, Freak certinty, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Freak certinty, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH030

Alex Heilbron, Peripheral crack, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Peripheral crack, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH031

Alex Heilbron, Peripheral crack, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Peripheral crack, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH031

Alex Heilbron, Dissenting, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Dissenting, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH032

Alex Heilbron, Dissenting, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Dissenting, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH032

Alex Heilbron, Polite lassitute, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Polite lassitute, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH033

Alex Heilbron, Polite lassitute, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Polite lassitute, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH033

Alex Heilbron, Serindipity, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Serindipity, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH034

Alex Heilbron, Serindipity, 2023

Alex Heilbron

Serindipity, 2023

Acrylic on canvas on panel

28 x 20 x 2 in / 71.1 x 50.8 x 5.1 cm

AH034

Press Release

Meliksetian | Briggs is pleased to present Apophenic, new paintings by Alex Heilbron and her second solo exhibition with the gallery. The exhibition has been extended through November 4th, 2023.

 

The exhibition takes its title from apophenia, an early symptom of schizophrenia in which a person begins to draw connections between seemingly unrelated phenomena. Troubled by a disorder of the altogether essential process of meaning making, the apophenic no longer discriminates between the contingent and the intentional. Put another way, she comes to see a “pattern” in the undeniable recurrence or logic within the “wallpaper” or “background” of everyday life. Applied to Heilbron’s work, the symptom suggests an aesthetic preoccupation with pattern, a genre intended to resolve into the background, but instead is the protagonist in her work. 

 

The exhibition is a continuation of Heilbron’s deployment of pattern on the surface of the canvas as a register of cultural ideals of femininit marking a development in her work informed by a technical shift from an entirely manual process of masking to a mixed process incorporating computer-controlled elements. Variations come to our attention, as in Heilbron’s manually articulated paintings, through compositional regularity: five paintings repeat the same scale/ratio used in her last show, while the others fall within two distinct formats; all the works in Apophenic repeat a simple four-pointed flower grid at varying scales. A subtle inclusion of manual gesture remains inherent, though here the warm qualities of manual craftsmanship give way to the cold registration of digital transaction—the swipe and place, the copy and stretch. This formal shift is paralleled by an aggressive tension in the work calling up the psychic fringes of American subjectivity.

 

The muddling of meaning that comes with the territory of the decorative is hyperbolized by the application of new strategies in the work–from the inclusion of erroneous spellings and portmanteau words to disfigurations of motif. Drawing inspiration from her visit at the John F. Kennedy Memorial Plaza and The George W. Bush Presidential Library in Dallas, Texas, Heilbron incorporates associations from ruptures in American history. Her new patterned paintings are contaminated by the fall-out of an event, as in Depository and Expectations and results, which diagram the Chanel suit worn by Jackie Onassis in the motorcade.

Blood is suggestively encoded in twee red icons clustered areas of intensity, proliferating symbols, references, and gestures. The stimulus is more granular in the five paintings titled Flag (I-V), flag-based patterns tattered by glitch in which the graphic representation of a doll-like female visage serves as an anchoring interruption amidst the vibrating effect of rectangular marks and parallel lines in the thick of the work’s overall floral motif.

 

As an index of history, Heilbron’s paintings continue to evoke a nebulous territory through freely modifying stylistic motifs from past eras in pallets and graphic styles conceived in present time. Take for instance the four-pointed flower featured in each painting in the show: its origin is alternately Medieval and Mid-Century, or even reminiscent of digital graphic design from the 1990s or early 2000s. Evading the depths of the past, Heilbron’s paintings evoke an ahistorical plane of simultaneity. As in the psychoanalytic description of schizophrenia, a foreground-background confusion produces a subject without an unconscious—pure surface is a genre of madness.

 

Text by Nilo Goldfarb

 

An essay Apophenia about the new body of work by French art historian, critic and curator Marie de Brugerolle is also available.

 

Alex Heilbron (b.1987, San Rafael, CA) received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in 2009 from the San Francisco Art Institute, studied at the Kunstakademie Düsseldorf from 2014-2017 and earned her Master of Fine Arts at the University of California, Los Angeles in 2020. Heilbron has exhibited both nationally and internationally. In 2022, her work was included in the major survey exhibition Women Painting Women curated by Andrea Karnes at The Modern, Fort Worth, TX (catalog). Other recent solo exhibitions include High Shame at Hiestand Galleries, Miami University, Oxford, OH and Scent Description for a Young Woman at Ashley, Berlin. Group shows over the past few years include exhibitions at LAXART, Los Angeles. Moscow Museum of Modern Art, Moscow, Cosmo Sports, Düsseldorf, Good Forever, Düsseldorf, Contemporary Fine Art, Berlin and Unit/Pitt Gallery, Vancouver. She has received numerous awards including the William and Dorothy Yeck Purchase Award, the Helen Frankenthaler Scholarship in 2019 - 2020 and a Pollock-Krasner Grant for 2023-24. Heilbron lives and works in Los Angeles.