MARK BORGHI Sag Harbor propositions viewers with What are you looking at? Either with a question mark or exclamation, the viewer is impugned to engage. What are you looking at? Am I the voyeur, the judgment, or the redeemer? What we are looking at is the amalgamation of artist Maureen Dougherty's approach in combining abstraction and figuration concerning the fem in contemporary culture in an unconventional manner. The works are a mirror to the world that we see primarily on our phones, in the streets, and on tv screens, aping beauty, using crude recognizable conventions of sexuality to get our attention. They morph fearlessly with the interior lives of gender, race, sexuality, power, politics, animals, and nature. During the listless isolation of the pandemic, various sites served to inspire and inform the artist, where the objectification of girls is their brand. The rabbit hole is deep, and Dougherty chose to meet it, not ignore it. She is shedding light on the digital women who display themselves in a manner intended as erotic and pornographic referencing the font of this kind of imagery from Picasso's Demoiselles d’ Avignon and German expressionists like Hegel and Kirshner for explicit and direct lasciviousness.
Dougherty's palette remains constant within the 30 works in this exhibition, with a minimal of six primaries. She keeps her color intense and potent in purity by not mixing more than three colors. Her figures, lacking a light source or chiaroscuro, are lit from within, constantly chasing form through the impression of light. Reoccurring iconographic tattoos, ferocious tigers baring fangs, diamond patterns, African masks, and house plants invite our inquisitiveness.
Dougherty's technique was shaped by her training at Carnegie Mellon and with Mercedes Matter at the New York Studio School. She recently showed in the Cheim & Read show “Some People,” 2022, where the Alex Katz Foundation acquired her work. Maureen resides in Chelsea, NY, and keeps a studio on the lower east side.
https://www.markborghi.com/exhibitions/42-maureen-dougherty-what-are-you-looking-at/