Must-SeeNAP Artists on View

Natia Lemay: Just Short of Contact at Wilding Cran Gallery

Written by Derek Simpson

Two empty chairs facing each other in a dimly lit, moody room.

Wilding Cran Gallery is pleased to present Just Short of Contact, an exhibition of new paintings by Toronto based artist, Natia Lemay, that explore domestic space as a complex of interiority, intrusion, and recovery.

Throughout the exhibition, the domestic emerges as a site of memory and quiet tension, where intimacy and absence coexist in a state of unresolved proximity. Domestic objects act as vessels and placeholders, capable of holding emotional charge. An empty chair stands in for what is no longer present; a collapsed or broken window blurs interior and exterior. In the work Saturation, a figure sits in a vacant room overgrown with dandelions seeping up through the floorboards. The intrusion of the natural world feels like a breach, an infiltration of overgrowth within a space of refuge. Throughout the work, the omnipresence of black absorbs and obscures, slowing perception and holding the viewer's gaze in suspension.

 

Natia Lemay, Residue, 2026. Oil on canvas. 40 x 40 in.

 

The primary use of black as both material and concept is an ongoing investigation that lies at the heart of Lemay's practice. Through layered glazes and washes, the artist attends to the subtle tonal shifts within her pigments, pushing the viewer to see beyond black. What initially appears dense or enclosed gradually opens, revealing a spectrum of internal hues-blues, greens, browns, purples-emerging through time and attention. Among figureless works, such as Obstruction, black unfolds as the eye acclimates, moving across a narrowed hallway where passage is both physically and perceptually blocked. Shadows, windows, and traces of a mattress reveal themselves gradually, providing points of access to those who take the time to search for them.

In Lemay's darkened interiors, human figures negotiate with their surroundings, at times swallowed, at times emerging. Connection is possible, but not yet established. In the work Reception, a figure leans over the metal footboard of a bed, looking out across an empty chair into a field of weeds and roses; two telephone poles are visible in the distance, against a clouded, dark blue sky. In a departure from the other works on view, the domestic is no longer confined or breached, but opened outward. The collapse of boundaries captures a loosening, a shift in psychological reorientation.

 

Natia Lemay, Proximity, 2026. Oil on canvas. 30 x 36 in.

 

Rather than offering resolution, Just Short of Contact holds the viewer at a threshold-an extended moment of looking that resists completion. The paintings do not lead toward an answer so much as they continue to pull, asking the viewer to remain in proximity; to sit in a space between past and future, interior and exterior; to connect with what is unfinished and unresolved. Black, like memory, opens slowly through sustained looking, revealing depth without delivering answers. This sustained tension becomes a form of meditation, an invitation to hold space for surrender, not as an ending, but as a condition of emergence.

Just Short of Contact marks Natia Lemay's first solo exhibition in Los Angeles.

D

Written by

Derek Simpson

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