Peter Blum Gallery is pleased to present vector specter, an exhibition of new works by Brooklyn-based artist, Rebecca Ward. This marks the artist’s second solo exhibition with the gallery. The exhibition opens on April 5, with an opening reception from 4–6 p.m., and will run through May 31, 2025, at 176 Grand Street, New York, NY.
Rebecca Ward's practice merges painting, sculpture, and craft by physically deconstructing and reassembling canvases to create geometrically grounded works. By exposing the multidimensional nature of painting and its constituent parts, Ward creates a spatial play of harmonious forms and color interactions that explore the relationship between the mathematical and the natural world.
In the current exhibition, Ward delves into the complex interplay between transparency and the spectral presence of the abstract. Through a manipulation of reassembled materials and viscous gradients, the artist explores spectrums—both literal and metaphorical—where shadow and form transcend their physical boundaries. The work invites viewers to contemplate the delicate nature of perception, blurring the lines between the tangible and the ethereal. Ghostly silhouettes, fragmented and elusive, emerge from the translucency of unwoven canvas, embodying the shifting forms that shape understanding of reality.
Each of the ten works in the exhibition incorporate both hard-edged and curving forms that emerge from rectangular canvas planes, with varying scales, tonalities, and configurations. The shapes originate as digital drawings within a mathematical space—a vector that can be infinitely large or small—before being enclosed within the confines of stretcher bars. This initial step of creating sketches involves layering dissected forms and diverse shades that persist in the final handcrafted, sculptural objects.
The titles add layers of associations as in Ward’s two largest works to date, soft landing and sea creature, that required a highly physical approach in construction and washes of color. In hunger and hunger II, geometric sections of canvas are hand-dyed and painted in a spectrum of pinks and maroons, evoking wider associations of tone. A signature of Ward’s practice over the past decade has included taking fabric apart by removing the weft to create a new and transparent image. Particularly prevalent in open secret, yet present in each of the works, is unraveled canvas that both exposes and obscures the underlying stretcher bars.
The woven canvas can be understood as a physical representation of a mathematical grid, where the warp and weft create a regular pattern of squares and rectangles, a visual reflection of geometric order. As a queer identified person, Ward combines curving lines and axis to demonstrate that masculinity and femininity are not fixed, binary concepts, but are dynamic, evolving, and context dependent. In this way, the grid becomes a representation of the slippage between forms that can be viewed as bodies, vessels, graphs, or purely geometric outlines. Through these methods, Ward communicates the presence of what shapes cannot be fully grasped, offering a meditation on the nature of being, absence, and spaces in between.
Rebecca Ward (b. 1984, Waco, TX) lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. She earned a BA at the University of Texas, Austin, TX (2006) and an MFA at the School of the Visual Arts, New York, NY (2012). Institutional exhibitions include Rebecca Ward: distance to venus, SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, NM (2022); Fresh Faces from the Rachofsky Collection, Site 131, Dallas, TX (2021); Over & Over, Columbia College, Chicago, IL (2018); Rebecca Ward, The FLAG Art Foundation, New York, NY (2017); Eastwing Biennial: Artificial Realities, The Courtauld Institute of Art, London, UK (2016); Making & Unmaking, Camden Art Centre, London, UK (2016); The Tim Sayer Bequest, The Hepworth Wakefield, West Yorkshire, United Kingdom (2016); Linear Abstraction, Savannah College of Art and Design, Savannah, GA (2015); Rebecca Ward: indulgences, Exchiesetta, Polignano a Mare, Italy (2015). Residencies include Shandaken: Storm King Art Center, New Windsor, NY (2016) and Atelier Alighiero Boetti, Todi, Italy (2013).
For press inquiries, please contact Alejandro Jassan Studio at ale@alejassan.com or +1 (917) 257-1355. For all other inquiries, please contact Kyle Harris at kyle@peterblumgallery.com or +1 (212) 244-6055.