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Sandbar (with Jetties)  2018

Chris Ballantyne

Sandbar (with Jetties)

2018

Acrylic on panel

40 x 60 inches

CBalp9

Fields  2018

Chris Ballantyne

Fields

2018

Acrylic on panel

36 x 48 inches

CBalp12

Intersection  2016

Chris Ballantyne

Intersection

2016

Acrylic on panel

32 x 30 inches

CBalp7

Storage Units  2018

Chris Ballantyne

Storage Units

2018

Acrylic on panel

36 x 48 inches

CBalp16

Apts  2018

Chris Ballantyne

Apts

2018

Acrylic on panel

22 x 18 inches

CBalp14

Parking Spot  2017

Chris Ballantyne

Parking Spot

2017

Acrylic on panel

8 x 8 inches

CBalp1

Chris Ballantyne, Parking Lot

Chris Ballantyne

Parking Lot

2017

Acrylic on panel

8 x 10 inches

CBalp4

Stairway  2018

Chris Ballantyne

Stairway

2018

Acrylic on panel

27 x 36 inches

CBalp10

Wave Cliff 2016

Chris Ballantyne

Wave Cliff

2016

Acrylic on panel

24 x 32 inches

CBalp20

Apt Living 2018

Chris Ballantyne

Apt Living

2018

India ink on paper

12 x 16 inches

CBald10

City Block (2) 2017

Chris Ballantyne

City Block (2)

2017

India ink on paper

12 x 16 inches

CBald 1

Building with Palms  2018

Chris Ballantyne

Building with Palms

2018

India ink on paper

12 x 16 inches

CBald11

Backyard Pools (Night)  2018

Chris Ballantyne

Backyard Pools (Night)

2018

Acrylic and ink on paper

12 x 16 inches

CBald 17

Dawn (Rooftops)  2017

Chris Ballantyne

Dawn (Rooftops)

2017

Acrylic on panel

36 x 48 inches

CBalp8

City Blocks  2017

Chris Ballantyne

City Blocks

2017

Acrylic on panel

40 x 60 inches

CBalp13

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne: Temporal, Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York, 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Installation View, Chris Ballantyne, Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors, George Adams Gallery, New York 2019.

Press Release

Chris Ballantyne
Temporal: Recent Paintings and Watercolors

January 10 – March 3

To start off the new year, the George Adams Gallery will present our first exhibition of paintings and works on paper by New York artist Chris Ballantyne. The installation will include recent paintings on unprimed wood panels and ink and acrylic works on paper, as well as a site-specific work painted directly on the gallery wall.

Ballantyne combines the precision of architectural diagrams with the fluidity of ink paintings in his spare, unpopulated landscapes. Combining suburban or urban constructions such as apartment complexes, highways or parking lots with natural spaces, he plays off the contradictions inherent to man’s relation to nature. Utilizing the lexicon of housing developments and urban sprawl, the repetition and featureless geometry stands in contrast to, or slyly mimics his expansive fields and forests, oceans and sky. The artificial compositions hint at absurdity: roads leading to nowhere punctuated by streetlights, endless city grids either self-contained or in infinite sprawl, backyard pools devoid of houses. In contrast, the natural spaces in Ballantyne’s paintings are flat and empty, only the most token details describe their content: some blades of grass, an edge of surf, the suggestion of leaves. It is where the two collide that is most provocative. The 2016 painting ‘Wave Cliff’ is such an example, a crumbling ledge with ranch houses scattered along its edge has the shape and energy of a cresting wave. More often the juxtaposition is more distinct, with boundaries carefully delineating the transition between spaces.

Born in Mobile, AL in 1972, Chris Ballantyne currently lives and works in New York City and has been exhibiting his work in the United States and Europe for over two decades. He is the recipient of several awards, including a grant from the Joan Mitchell Foundation in 2005, and his work is included in multiple public collections.