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Jenny Morgan Debuts Her Vivid Portraits in the UK in “Turning the Tide”

The vivid oil paintings of Jenny Morgan capture an honesty about her subjects, drawn in a candid moment in the nude when they are at their most vulnerable. The Brooklyn based artist's electrifying figurative work, gracing the cover of Hi-Fructose Vol. 39, balances abstraction and realism, combining beautiful design aesthetics with her subject's unique complexion and emotion. Morgan herself has described her work as "psychological portraits", focused on presenting the sitter's psychological state.

The vivid oil paintings of Jenny Morgan capture an honesty about her subjects, drawn in a candid moment in the nude when they are at their most vulnerable. The Brooklyn based artist’s electrifying figurative work, gracing the cover of Hi-Fructose Vol. 39, balances abstraction and realism, combining beautiful design aesthetics with her subject’s unique complexion and emotion. Morgan herself has described her work as “psychological portraits”, focused on presenting the sitter’s psychological state.

Perhaps one of the most striking and recognizable characteristics of Morgan’s work is her colorful palette, which takes precedent in the 11 new paintings she created for her UK solo debut, “Turning the Tide”, opening today at Beers London. Her new body of work expresses an exploration into new color relationships, mixing brights with grey scale tones inspired by lunar patterns.

The title of her show is a reference to the moon’s power to control the tides, caused by the combined effects of gravitational forces exerted by the Moon, Sun, and rotation of the Earth. It is a power that Morgan relates to the duality of the human psyche. In her words: “the act of reversing the direction of energy and thought by transforming the darkness to light, and inversely, turning lightness to dark and revealing the psychological shadow.”

“I feel as though I naturally teeter along many lines and find that quality of the work both frustrating and empowering. For me, defining individuality in a portrait is to embed the painting with a soul or sensation of a specific person.” – Jenny Morgan, Hi-Fructose Vol. 39.

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Our 39th volume of Hi-Fructose New Contemporary Art Magazine arrives in stores April 1st. You can also reserve a copy by pre-ordering direct from us here! Featured in this issue is: "Very Strange Days, Indeed", a cover feature with fantastic painter Jenny Morgan, the bright and quiet narratives of painter Andrew Brandou, the painfully dark work of master painter Odd Nerdrum, the playful world of artist Tripper Dungan, R.S. Connett's highly detailed "micro verse", fantastic water color paintings by Dima Rebus, and the powerful tiny street installations of sculptor Isaac Cordal. Plus major features on sculptor Scott Hove inside his teeth-gnashing Cakeland, and Portland painter David Rice's wildlife-filled work. Plus a review of Joan Cornellà's insanely demented Mox Nox book. This issue also includes a special 16-page preview of the Turn the Page: The First Ten Years of Hi-Fructose exhibition at the Virginia MOCA.
Upon first glance, Kent Williams’ subjects are all part of the same narratives, yet upon closer inspection perhaps that’s not the case at all. Read Ken Harman's full article on Kent Williams by clicking above.

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