Press Release: Begin from Observation

Teddy Benfield, Untitled (Indoor Open 2), 2020. House paint, acrylic paint, oil paint, ink, krink ink, oil pastel, china marker, spray paint on canvas.
48 x 48 in

April 20 - May 29, 2022

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery proudly presents Begin From Observation, a three-person exhibition featuring Teddy Benfield (Boston, MA), Richard Keen (Brunswick, ME), and Samuel Stabler (Athens, GA). The exhibition title is derived from the techniques taught in an artist’s first courses: when learning how to draw you must begin from observation. It is one of the most basic but true rules of learning composition, proportions, rendering, and everything else important that must be built upon before an artist can let themselves branch out or break these rules. The premier step any artist must take is learning how to draw directly from learning how to see. In this exhibition, each artist explores truth through abstraction as a method of viewing the world in its most authentic form. The artists render still life, landscapes, and portraiture, referencing art history’s past combined with the materials of the present.

In his still life paintings, Teddy Benfield mixes a multitude of media to generate a dialogue between traditional still life genre painting and the relationships we have with marketplace consumerism through contemporary internet culture. Benfield’s compositions are packed with the representational imagery we see every day from brands, logos, motifs and even patterns claimed by specific subcultures, like the black and white checkerboard pattern often associated with skaters. In doing so, Benfield opens up a conversation around the ever-changing definition of culture, and how it is so often dictated by class differences. 

Richard Keen, Blue Trees No. 10 (Dresden), 2021. Acrylic and oil on canvas. 36 x 30 in.

Conversely, Richard Keen aims to remove the representational details in his work, obscuring lush landscapes by paring them down to color and form. Keen’s saturated, geometric compositions explore the relationship between nature, the man-made, and the space that exists between. In breaking down his subjects to the most basic elements, he finds truth in their simplicity, allowing both himself and his audience to see these subjects through their own unique lens. His motifs are inspired by his time spent in the woods of Maine.

In his debut presentation at Abigail Ogilvy Gallery, artist Samuel Stabler guides his viewers through familiar imagery with a modern eye. Stabler, as many great artists before him, revisits the work of old masters, playing off of the subject matter to create a picture that is wholly his own. Using highlighter neon colors and gold gouache, Stabler chooses parts of the original compositions that he has felt need more attention than they have previously been granted. In a recent interview with Gallery 151, Stabler states: “I like the idea of taking something that was maybe forgotten and bringing it back out.” In doing so, he alters our perception of the Western canon and celebrates the cycle of reinvention in art history. 

All together the three artists’ work combines meticulously rendered details that inspire deep examination. A reminder of the importance of the past in order to present subject matter in a way that both remains dynamic and speaks to the way they see the world in this moment.

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Teddy Benfield is a Boston based artist from Connecticut (b. 1992). He received his MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University (2018) and his BFA in Visual arts from Union College (2015) as well as a certificate in Sneaker Design from Fashion Institute of Technology (2019). 

Samuel Stabler, Untitled Combine (Stallone, McQueen), 2021. Pen, acrylic paint, hand cut paper. 50 x 38 in. (framed)

Richard Keen (b. 1971, Pennsylvania) is a contemporary abstract artist who works in a variety of media, including painting, murals, and sculpture. He has shown in numerous New England solo and group exhibitions at the University of Maine Museum of Art, Elizabeth Moss Gallery, The Painting Center, New York, Gallery 49, Simon Gallery, and Barrett Art Center, among others. Keen has been featured in Art New England, Boston Voyager Magazine, Portland Herald Press, and Maine Home and Design. 

Georgia-born and based artist Samuel Stabler is known for his contemporary take on Old Master paintings. The artist recreates these masterworks in highly detailed pen-and-ink drawings, which he then obscures with streaks of neon yellow, adding a contemporary update to centuries-old masterpieces. Sourcing images from the internet, he also creates meticulous cut-outs, transforming once familiar subjects into abstract webs of line and contour. “Old Masters used to paint the masters before them,” he has said. “The internet age has allowed me to have this huge access to information, so I’m appropriating it in the way that makes sense to me now.”

Press Inquiries: kaylee@abigailogilvy.com

Richard Keen: Abstracted Topographies

Richard Keen, Blue Trees No. 07, 2020, Acrylic and Oil on Canvas, 24 x 20 in.

Click to view all available artwork.

For artist Richard Keen, the Maine landscape serves as an important influence across his entire body of work. Keen’s newest paintings in the Abstracted Topographies series clearly reference trees, landscapes, and coastal vistas around Maine, the imagery directly linked to recent hikes with his family and dogs. Created over the last six months, these paintings are a result of the artist trying to maintain physical and mental health during the pandemic. Textured skies and brightly patterned grasses stand in stark contrast to the smoothness of the trees themselves. The trees exude calmness against the frenetic, tactile energy of each background, as they are able to stand in quiet opposition. These are not static snapshots of a forest scene, but instead a rhythmic reinterpretation of natural space. The subject matter of trees brings a sense of unwavering resilience; the works are a reminder that it is a feat just to stand and remain standing in the face of chaos.

His Form Singularity paintings are more minimal: typically there is a horizon line, with patterns and colors that strike Keen’s eye on any given outdoor experience. Their reductive qualities give the artist a meditative experience during the process of making art  - which has been critical to his mental health throughout the pandemic. Keen works on these series simultaneously, and often finds that colors overlap and influence each other: and if you look closely, all of the shapes that he paints are connected.

Richard Keen, Purple Trees No. 04 (Monhegan), 2020, Signed on, Acrylic and Oil on Canvas, 36 x 30 in.

Richard Keen’s whimsical color palette interacts playfully with the textured, natural world it represents. These trees are unique; they challenge us to build new realities up and away from the reality we have been given. We are in a difficult moment in history, and the collective trauma of living through a pandemic has challenged the mental health of us all. Keen’s work is a breath of novelty and innovation that renews our sense of place and challenges our more creative sides to craft new truths.

Artist Spotlight: Richard Keen

Our gallery Director Allyson Boli sat down with Richard Keen to learn more about his creative process. Not only is Richard both a talented painter and sculptor, but he also has three studio dogs! Read our interview below to learn more about him:

Allyson Boli: What was your initial spark to be an artist?  

Richard Keen: I can remember drawing and tracing a lot as a child. Throughout school, I also gravitated to art and music classes and fortunately went to a public high school that had a solid art program with four art faculty who were very supportive.  After high school, when it came time to decide between moving to LA to become a “Rock and Roll Star” versus going to college for art, something inside me must have known I would be a better visual artist – that plus a heavy parental urging to go to college.   

AB: What is your creative process like? Do you begin with an end result envisioned?

RK: My creative process generally starts with turning on music and looking around at what I did last. I often have at least 10-15 pieces happening at once and paints mixed up ready to go so that I can jump right in and get messy. Most of my work starts with putting down some light ground colors with acrylics to block out some simple shapes. Then, I start building up lines, shapes, colors and textures with my oils. Sometimes I have a sense of a basic direction that I want a painting to head in, or I try to capture elements of other paintings that I’ve completed, but I don’t typically have a vision for an end result. 

AB: So it sounds like you’re working on multiple pieces at once, how does that play into your overall process?

RK: Yes, I find that working on similar but different bodies of work at the same time keeps my work moving in interesting directions. I often find that one painting, or group of paintings, informs the other and helps me with color choices, textures and generally keeps me from getting stuck in a rut. 

AB: What inspired your sculptural and shaped paintings? 

RK: My current sculptural and shaped paintings come from within my “Form Singularity” paintings and through finding shapes that resonate with me. I’ve been exploring three-dimensional work as far back as I can remember, but I think that I would have to say that making shaped paintings could be directly attributed to my appreciation for Elizabeth Murray’s work. I can also say that walking through a boatyard in the off season, and seeing how boat hulls get sanded and repainted also stimulated my urge to make shaped work. I think I saw a rudder laying on the ground half sanded by the yard crew… that was a moment of inspiration for me too.

AB: What made you move toward the more minimal style of the Form Singularity series?  

RK: I’ve leaned towards simplifying, reducing, and minimizing the amount of information that I put onto the canvas all along my path as an artist. As far back as high school, I remember working with simplified shapes and amplified colors. My “Form Singularity” Series is, in a sense, my natural state of being, while my other series act as bridges for viewers to cross over into the way I see the world.   

AB: Are there any artists that inform your work?  

RK: Oh yes… I love so many fantastic artists. I mentioned Elizabeth Murray earlier, who I was lucky enough to meet a couple times. I’m a fan of Richard Diebenkorn, Clyfford Still, Helen Frankenthaler and so many of the late greats. A few contemporary artists that I admire greatly are Julie Mehretu, Cadence Giersbach, Chris Ofili, Gary Hume and David Tremlett.  

AB: What are you currently working on? 

RK: I’m currently working on new “Form Singularity” paintings, new “Island Geometry and Sea Geometry” paintings, and several new sculptures while balancing out the demands of a couple upcoming three-person shows here in Maine. I’m also working on a Public Art Project through Maine’s Percent for Art Program. The multi-panel mural is an 8’ x 8’ abstraction made up of 6 geometric panels linked closely to my “Island Geometry” and will be installed in June of 2020.

View Richard Keen’s work in our exhibition Almost Exactly on view through June 16, 2019.

Artist Richard Keen in front of his work at Abigail Ogilvy Gallery: Form Singularity No. 165, Acrylic and Oil on Canvas, 72 x 64 in., 2019