CRISTI RINKLIN: The Weight of Ghosts
October 4 - December 31, 2019
Cristi Rinklin, Harbinger 3, 2019, acrylic on composite aluminum panel, 23 x 23 inches
Z’M Projects is pleased to present After, an exhibition of three new paintings by New York-based artist, Damien H. Ding. The exhibition will be on view from March 28 - May 9, 2026 with an opening reception on April 3 from 5:30 - 8 pm.
The works in After reflect on painting as both subject and method, as a practice grounded in return, revision, and sustained attention, where meaning remains provisional and in flux. These three paintings developed through Ding’s extended engagement with Landscape with a Calm by 17th-century painter, Nicolas Poussin, alongside his reading of TJ Clark’s The Sight of Death, a memoir of experimental art criticism.
In The Sight of Death, Clark records his observations across multiple viewings of two Poussin paintings at The Getty Museum: Landscape with a Calm and Landscape with a Man Killed by a Snake. Returning day after day, Clark observes how perception shifts over time, shaped by mood, attention and duration.
Ding’s process mirrors this oscillation. Moving between close study of Poussin’s work and Clark’s reflections, he continuously revised his painting in response to shifting perceptions. Through this iterative practice, Ding locates an analogy between Poussin’s suspended tensions and the act of painting itself: a space of uncertainty, negotiation, and unresolved meaning. This inquiry extends into two accompanying paintings, one of which is a self portrait.
In Self Portrait as a Stick Figure, an abstracted spindly figure stands in for the artist, at once observer and participant. The left side of the picture plane and the artist’s body begin to merge together, as his right arm lifts to paint a pastoral landscape. Are artists akin to shepherds guiding the scene, or figures on the periphery, passively fading into the ramparts and witnessing from a distance?
After ultimately considers the relationship between stillness and motion, perception and finality. While calm may suggest rest or resolution, it often exists within ongoing change. Like a pendulum pausing only at the height of its arc, the paintings inhabit a moment of suspension, poised between equilibrium and collapse.
CRISTI RINKLIN received her MFA from the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis in 1999, and her BFA in painting from Maryland Institute, College of Art in 1989. She has exhibited her work in galleries and museums throughout the United States, as well as venues in Rome, Florence, and Amsterdam. Rinklin is the recipient of grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, the Berkshire Taconic Artist’s Resource Trust and the Jerome Foundation Fellowship and has been a Visiting Artist/Scholar at the American Academy in Rome. This is Rinklin’s second solo exhibition with Steven Zevitas Gallery.
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