Unsolved Collections: The Paintings of Sarah Awad’s Transference and Speculation
Written by Andrew Katz Katz

A lightheartedness initially seems to wash over the paintings, coating the imagery in rich layers of Majorelle blue, orange, and chartreuse. Individually the works evoke the stories of photographs—travel scenes in Rome and Paris, a couple on a beach, a moment in aerospace history. But, then obvious references come to light; Matisse’s blue nudes, Seurat’s famous Sunday afternoon, Damien Hirst’s iconic skull unfold from Awad’s imagery. The disjointed objects and allusions present a disordered compilation that makes unexplainable sense. The relationships between the divergent subjects are obscured, but when taken in together, the show congeals as a mysterious collection.
The curious objects within many of the paintings generate an instant magnetism through their familiarity; yet, a persistent darkness underlies each scene, most prominently in the works that contain humans. Sunday Afternoon’s impenetrable lawn of green constructs an atmosphere of void and melancholia to surround its unexplainable nude that gazes at its own shadow. The Visit at first looks like a delicate portrait, until the details of its bizarre composition are fully comprehended; its Audrey Hepburn-like figure stands beside a group of black men with faceless expressions, who watch a disembodied hand graze her chest. In Split, two men stand in what may or may not be the tip of a boat, engaging in a confrontation stance. Across all of these works, action happens, but the narrative Awad abstracts is only a tease; there is no explanation to be found.
Forming a collection of relationship fragments as divergent as the assortment of objects across the set of works, both the object- and human-centered paintings of Transference and Speculation exist in a state of pointed irresolution. Through the thick substance of her painted surfaces, Awad reorders rationality, leaving us the addictive pleasure of trying to make sense of it all.
Transference and Speculation is on view at James Harris Gallery through November 30. Sarah Awad received her MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles. Her work has recently been featured at CUE Art Foundation in New York, NY; BB Galerie in Berlin; and 5790projects in Los Angeles, CA, among other locations. She was awarded the Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant in 2011. --- Erin Langner is a writer based in Seattle and is Manager of Adult Public Programs at the Seattle Art Museum (SAM).
Written by
Andrew Katz Katz
More stories
View allTHE MAGAZINE
Explore our magazine to discover exceptional artists

Call for Artists
Submit your work for consideration
New American Paintings is a juried exhibition-in-print and digital, presenting the work of 40 emerging artists in each issue.
Your gateway to new art
Discover tomorrow's art stars, today

PRINT + EARLY ACCESS DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION
$179/YEAR
DIGITAL SUBSCRIPTION
$99/YEAR OR $10/MONTH
Each issue of New American Paintings features forty artists selected through our juried competitions—presented in a beautifully curated, full-color publication. Subscribers receive six issues per year, plus exclusive online access to current and past editions. Are you a collector? Consider our premium subscription and receive our museum-quality printed publication + access to each new digital issue two weeks before its general release.









