Press release
Painting is a wholly creative enterprise, more faithful to the calls of Composition, Light and Color than to reproductions of reality. The advent of photography freed painting from this burden, or so the story goes... One could tell a history of art as a succession of technologies that granted expressive freedom to whatever it left in the dust.
 
Emma Webster, a painter of landscapes though not a landscape painter—and the distinction is important—, revels in indicating that liberties have been taken. In her paintings, natural elements are distorted to an almost hallucinogenic degree. Clouds billow and bubble over, sunlight cuts through like a shard, knotty tree trunks twist and turn about, mountain lines buckle and burst forth… Here is a natural world that is nowhere to be found in nature and somehow we still assume that the reference must be grounded in physical fact, some vista somewhere which the artist has abstracted, riffed on and revised.
 
This, however, would be too simple a project, too aligned with the “new figuration” into which landscape as a genre would figure as yet another example of the Real filtered through a Sensibility. I speak here of Sensibility not disparagingly but factually, as an additive process or the imposition of something personal (Style) upon the universal (Nature). If we were to speak of Emma Webster’s “Style” as a figurative painter, which she is, we would be diminishing the project at hand. The contorted natural world in evidence here is not a product of an aesthetic flourish, but the thing itself.
 
Consider the source material for Webster’s paintings; whereas most artists would refer to life or a photograph and rely on drawing or sketching as preparatory, Webster speaks of “building.” Her landscapes are wholly constructed using Virtual Reality before being transposed to the canvas.
 
Previously, Webster created maquettes or dioramas as preparatory works, having more in common with a set designer in her approach than to other painters. If we entertain the cliche metaphors for painting as mirror or painting as window, (a natural fit for landscape painting), it’s clear Webster subscribes to another comparison: painting as proscenium, taking great relish in the artifice and illusion that is so specific to the theatre.
 
More recently, Webster’s forays into VR imaging have lent an even more heightened unreality to the works, a quality brought on by the ability to traverse these invented spaces cinematically, to change vantage points dramatically, to give experiential depth to the works. Whether her approach has been sculptural (maquettes) or digital (VR), in both she insists on flattening fleshed out spaces into a two-dimensional object: a painting, giving pixels the historical patina of painting and grounding it in the world of objects. In this process, these contrived landscapes are made real much in the way we must suspend disbelief in a theatre, both as actors and spectators.
 
Ready the Lanterns!, the title of Emma Webster’s new exhibition at Stems Gallery in Brussels, issues a kind of clarion call: to ignite the footlights as in a theatrical presentation, announcing an origin story of biblical proportions. ‘Let there be light,’ it seems to proclaim, casting daylight on a new world.
 
Text by Danny Kopel
Installation Views
Works
  • Emma Webster Nouveau Nocturn, 2021 Oil on linen 152 x 274 cm. 60 x 108 in.
    Emma Webster
    Nouveau Nocturn, 2021
    Oil on linen
    152 x 274 cm.
    60 x 108 in.
  • Emma Webster Moon Spotlight, 2021 Oil on linen 76 x 101 cm. 30 x 40 in.
    Emma Webster
    Moon Spotlight, 2021
    Oil on linen
    76 x 101 cm.
    30 x 40 in.
  • Emma Webster Mourning Reality, 2021 Oil on linen 152 x 122 cm. 60 x 48 in.
    Emma Webster
    Mourning Reality, 2021
    Oil on linen
    152 x 122 cm.
    60 x 48 in.
  • Emma Webster Four Seasons, 2021 Oil on canvas 112 x 152 cm. 44 x 60 in.
    Emma Webster
    Four Seasons, 2021
    Oil on canvas
    112 x 152 cm.
    44 x 60 in.
  • Emma Webster Family Tree, 2021 Oil on linen 160 x 120 cm. 63 x 47 in.
    Emma Webster
    Family Tree, 2021
    Oil on linen
    160 x 120 cm.
    63 x 47 in.
  • Emma Webster Magician, 2021 Oil on linen 183 x 244 cm. 72 x 96 in.
    Emma Webster
    Magician, 2021
    Oil on linen
    183 x 244 cm.
    72 x 96 in.
  • Emma Webster Flight Into Egypt, 2021 Oil on linen 152 x 274 cm. 60 x 108 in.
    Emma Webster
    Flight Into Egypt, 2021
    Oil on linen
    152 x 274 cm.
    60 x 108 in.
  • Emma Webster Storm, 2021 Oil on canvas 152 x 112 cm. 60 x 44 in.
    Emma Webster
    Storm, 2021
    Oil on canvas
    152 x 112 cm.
    60 x 44 in.
  • Emma Webster Fjord, 2021 Oil on linen 183 x 244 cm. 72 x 96 in.
    Emma Webster
    Fjord, 2021
    Oil on linen
    183 x 244 cm.
    72 x 96 in.
  • Emma Webster Badlands, 2021 Oil on linen 76 x 102 cm. 30 x 40 in.
    Emma Webster
    Badlands, 2021
    Oil on linen
    76 x 102 cm.
    30 x 40 in.
  • Emma Webster Iris, 2021 Oil on linen 244 x 183 cm. 96 x 72 in.
    Emma Webster
    Iris, 2021
    Oil on linen
    244 x 183 cm.
    96 x 72 in.
  • Emma Webster Oak, 2021 Oil on canvas 112 x 152 cm. 44 x 60 in.
    Emma Webster
    Oak, 2021
    Oil on canvas
    112 x 152 cm.
    44 x 60 in.
  • Emma Webster Cyclotrauma, 2021 Oil on linen 152 x 213 cm. 60 x 84 in.
    Emma Webster
    Cyclotrauma, 2021
    Oil on linen
    152 x 213 cm.
    60 x 84 in.