Inès Longevial: Skin of a Storm Almine Rech, Tribeca, New York
Thu 26 Jun 2025 to Fri 1 Aug 2025
361 Broadway, NY 10013
Tue-Sat 10am-6pm
Almine Rech New York, Tribeca presents 'Skin of a Storm', Inès Longevial's third solo exhibition with the gallery.
Skin cells are among the most rapidly renewed in the human body, only to be outpaced by varied gastrointestinal organs, elements of blood, and the cervix. Skin is the peel of our human body, a protective layer that encapsulates every other sensitive and squishy slice. Even as we decorate, bruise, and rejuvenate skin, it absorbs time, transforming for all to see. Skin can be a map, a projection—a mole or a scar, soft hands, a knobby knee, and a sweat-laden upper lip can rustle memories awake, occupying a space between seeing and feeling.
Inès Longevial's oil paintings draw attention to the skin, layered in seemingly smooth swatches of ultramarine, crimson, slate, chantilly, and mauve. These self-portraits—composed mostly from memory, informed by a repository of textures and forms consulted prior to their emergence—are a method of situating the artist in herself and the world. They are painted with urgency and oftentimes completed in one sitting. In this flow-state, the female form becomes a surface littered with subtle footnotes, like an odd wrinkle in a pleated skirt or the deep crease of a dog-earred page. A cropped face with down-turned eyes, a punctuated nipple, and a scapula blooming like an iris are, at a distance, totemic. The stoic sitters are disassociated, fermented. Upon closer inspection, hot-pink contour or blankets of honey light, feathered by the dry bristles of the artist's paintbrush, generate a supple, saturated landscape. Longevial offers an extreme perspectival shift through her impulsive markmaking upon the skin, often surprising herself. Her own experience living with myopia (extreme nearsidedness) is relayed to the viewer with grace, transforming skin into a woven surface, a microcosm, within the seemingly smooth composition of each painting. Wrapped in the tangible shimmer of the surface, unconcerned with matching the eye of the viewer, Longevial's sage subject is unconcerned with the viewer's yearning to define, place, or ingest her.
Longevial's drawings make an arresting shift, directly addressing the viewer with deadpan eyes and a seemingly dimensionless face in a tight crop of the eyes, nose, and mouth. In one set, an inverted pelvis is perched upon the lips, with spread legs engulfing the nose in a diamond shape, heels touching at the bridge. In another set, howling wolves replace the nose and a deep plié surrounds the lips. Within the sublime uniformity of the face, a cast of characters narrativizes the legacy of living in flashes of allegory. Ballet slippers are odes to flippant adolescence, while butterflies and snakes allude to metamorphosis. An anthropomorphized house and flower-headed femme throw us off the scent of such simplicity, however—these drawings serve as mythic self-reflection, nodding to place-making, masking, fear, transition, and freedom. Like petite prayer cards, each face is a theater and a mirror. Rather than scars or wrinkles, the imagery emanating from each face is grounded in experience, tethered to what the viewer cannot know behind the eyes.
A lesser-shown element of Longevial's practice, her monotypes, are being shown here for the first time. Although each print is unique, identical twins arise: an identical facial structure hosts distinct hairstyles or diametrically opposed color palettes, for example. Longevial's use of additive and subtractive marks, produced with alcohol markers and oil paint, insinuate an exfoliation and moisturizing regimen. The skin here is in-process, wherein pooled pigment and camouflaged critters upon the face suggest the pressure and joy, turmoil and unabashed sensuality have visceral remnants. These faces are defiant, lacking both performativity and ease so commonly found in female portraiture. In these prints, skin narrates the artist's relation to her changing world—stretching, sagging, morphing, and reflecting altercations or victories no one could know the true depth of.
On the occasion of Longevial's first solo exhibition at Almine Rech's New York City location, a new publication including the artist's drawings and poems written over the last two years will be available. This volume offers comprehensive insight into the artist's use of the face and skin to understand the topography of the body and soul, connected over time.