Anna McNay
27/02/16
Interview: Chantal
Joffe
Chantal Joffe
Victoria Miro, Mayfair
22 January – 24 March 2016
The walls of Victoria
Miro Mayfair are lined with faces: some overtly familiar, some less so,
although they all have something recognisable about them, as if they could belong to your circle of family
and friends. This is perhaps a reflection of how the artist, Chantal Joffe
(b1969), feels about the assorted subjects – including Sylvia Plath and Ted
Hughes, Anne Sexton, Elizabeth Hardwick – who crop up in her paintings, and
whom, after reading their confessional writings, she feels she knows. Indeed,
mixed in among these “celebrities” are portraits of Joffe’s own family – herself,
her daughter Esme – capturing the spontaneity of a summer snapshot, as the
paint drips down the canvas, or is dragged horizontally in ripples and stripes.
There is a tenderness, an intimacy and a liveliness to the pictures, both
familial and historic.
Known for her often large-scale oil paintings, Joffe
more recently began working in pastels, experimenting outdoors, and enjoying
the vivid colour palette. She spoke to Studio International about her
techniques, inspirations and recent directions.
Read this interview here