Inka Essenhigh USA, b. 1969
90.2 x 203.2 x 5.1 cm
Further images
Like ancient, Roman murals, whose fractured scenes remind us that violence and mysticism was part of our past nature, Essenhigh’s Uchronic images show our progeny living in harmony with nature in a blazing world, re-telling the human story to affect our imagined destiny. “The paintings do not show a complete picture,” says Essenhigh, “but rather fragments where we have to wonder how much is symbolic, how much is abstracted, or how much is literal. In The Living Room (2019), two children romp around what initially looks like an outdoor scene reminiscent of an Etruscan mural, but do they not have mouths? Was this a mutation? An improvement? Did something grotesque happen? It could look like a stylized person, but to someone in the future this could be exactly what they want to look like. This Uchronia may have problems. All these paintings show is that the biggest threat to our survival—ecological extinction—has been solved.”
“I’m not posing these pictures as definitive answers,” says Essenhigh. “I’m posing them as possibilities—a way to begin the conversation about what we want our future to look like. Some of the paintings are presented as relics, as if to implant a memory in the viewer’s subconscious. The question is, do we believe it?”
Provenance
The artist's studio, New York, NY, USAKavi Gupta gallery, Chicago, IL, USA