Spotlight Artist W.K. Lyhne
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Layered with thick, visceral strokes of oil paint, her works are a riposte to the traditional depictions of Christian women as pure and demure, lacking the feelings, emotions and urges that make all humans animal. In her solo exhibition The Surrogate at Patricia Low’s Venice gallery (until 6 April 2024), the wild emotions of maternal loss come to the fore, while her paintings in Something Woman* This Way Comes at Low’s Gstaad space (until 20 April) parallel the female form and the soft, pliable bodies of ewes.
Lyhne’s champion for The Wick is the veteran art historian, critic and curator Jean Wainwright, who finds a magnetic charge in her work.
Wainwright describes her paintings as impossible to ignore. “They convey important messages about our contemporary world of hybridity, humans and animals, and the pain of love and loss and mothering. They are powerfully resonant paintings for our contemporary times.”
For Lyhne, the ewe is an important recurring emblem. She explains: “I am interested in the animal we all are. My obsession with the ewe, a female sheep, is rooted in its potential symbolism within feminism and its relationship to the major trope in religion, the Virgin Mary. Historically our visual language for female suffering has tended to find beauty rather than injustice in women’s suffering and so our visual culture lacks a framework for finding beauty in a shouting woman.”
Each work in The Surrogate is named after the Stabat Mater: a 13th-century hymn that reimagines Mary’s suffering at the death of her son in song and therefore sound form.
Lyhne explains: “These artworks portray a suppressed scream, reflecting the confined space mothers often endure. The figure embodies an ultimately futile struggle, mirroring the modern farm ewe’s experience. Through abstracted elements, it confronts societal expectations of motherhood, resisting historical weight and commodification.”
Lyhne is currently the informal artist-in-residence at the exquisite London home of one of her collectors, Tom Price. “Imagine letting someone paint in your home?” she asks. The Wick can certainly see the appeal of watching her frenzied compositions come to life – whatever mess they might entail.
About the champion
Jean Wainwright is an art historian, critic and curator living in London. She is also Professor of Contemporary Art and Photography at the University for the Creative Arts (UCA). For her ongoing Audio Art Archive initiative (begun in 1996), she has interviewed over 2,000 international artists, makers, photographers, filmmakers, and curators. Wainwright has also published monographs and contributed numerous essays to books, alongside appearing in television and radio programmes and curating exhibitions at James Hockey Gallery, Bermondsey Project Space and Exeter Phoenix Gallery, among others.