Carmen Neely (b. 1987 in Charlotte, North Carolina; lives and works in Chicago) trades in semantics. For Neely, the difference between two types of line is not so much a preciouscommitment to formal queries that lead nowhere outside of the canvas; rather these marks are anearnest stab at solving real problems in expressing one’s own history and the histories that are passed through us by the act of mark making.
Neely’s canvases are surfaces taught with conflict, line, color and language. The marks ricochet and collide off one another, their meanings always affected by their proximity to other gestures. In Neely’s paintings, memory, speech, and feeling are not necessarily linear or discrete expressions and experiences but are rather codependent on a series of contexts that produce, interrupt and re-form them over time.
Her paintings give a feeling of catharsis, bursting with colorful and calligraphic strokes on delicate and soft backgrounds. The tableaus propose the peace that comes through an ongoing process of renegotiation and reiteration. If each line holds expressions of identity, values, and memory passed through generations of family and friendships, Neely’s consistent modulation of gesture and color in her own vernacular suggest the mutability and evolution of these values over time and geography.
The process is about intricacies of interpretation with the resulting works expressing a methodological approach to language that remains vulnerable to Neely’s own ongoing confrontation with selfhood.
Neely holds a Master in Fine Arts from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is included in the collection of The University of North Carolina (Charlotte, North Carolina), and Plattsburgh State Museum of Art, New York. Neely is currently an adjunct professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Carmen Neely’s forthcoming solo exhibition will open in fall 2024 in Paris.