Burning, Growing

an exhibition by Julia Gould and Matthew Napoli

upcoming

Julia Gould, Red Fruiting, the Fall of Adam and Eve, Oil on linen, 24 x 24 inches, 2024

on view

November 14–December 8, 2024

artist talk

Saturday, November 16, 2 pm
artist talk

reception

Friday, December 6, 6–8 pm
rsvp

Burning, Growing is a two-person exhibition by Rhode Island-based Matthew Napoli and Maryland-based Julia Gould. In this Gallery 263 Exhibition Proposal Series show, oil paintings by both artists alternate between comfort and tension in order to respond to the fragility of environmental and interpersonal climates. 

Commanded by color, light, and compositions originating from natural phenomena and internal mythologies, Gould and Napoli balance tenderness with grit through metaphoric imagery. Jeweled colors create forms and spaces characterized by their luminosity. Compositions guide through circling and sweeping structures that hold safe the image and its internal meaning(s).

In Gould’s work, visions of attraction and temptation present themselves. Within her paintings, the natural world curls, expands, and pulls apart from itself, forming stages for symbolic acts. People and other animals hover and move through the landscapes, exploring the various divides and barriers between subjects and their ambitions. In “Red Fruiting, the Fall of Adam and Eve,” the two lovers occupy the central orb, suggesting that it is their temptation that makes the surrounding landscape arid. This lack of restraint is also seen in the pressing state of our environment, which is why Gould has chosen dehydration as the method of destruction for Eden. In other paintings, Gould references Venus’ shell and Narcissus’s reflection pool. While rooted in classical narratives, archetypes fall apart as personal mythology narrates the complexities of desire.

Napoli’s work takes place in psychological space, finding appreciation in our malformed ecology. Inquiries into the relationships between the growing world and our built world evidence the difficult and nebulous truths of our environment—and our spirit. Napoli’s paintings consider this beleaguered state an opportunity for innovating new avenues of caring and faith. Clustered compositions, rendered in uneasy color, magnetize the oppositional and unsettling tangles that typify the world within and without ourselves. 

The paintings in this exhibition explore the artists’ relationships with the environment, other people, and themselves. Both intimacy and detachment are evident. In Burning, Growing, Gould and Napoli present their truths through lenses forged and fractured by their own lived experiences.

preview

Julia Gould, Sphinx Vase III, Oil on linen, 40 x 30 inches, 2023
Matthew Napoli, Broken Fossil, Oil on canvas, 16 x 16 inches, 2023
Matthew Napoli, Gingko biloba. I am growing trees in my guest room. I wanted to feel more connected to nature, so I bought plastic pots, plastic bags of soil, and a plastic watering can, Oil on canvas laid on panel, 39 x 41 inches, 2023
Julia Gould, Dry Land, Oil on linen, 16 x 20 inches, 2024
Julia Gould, Meet Me in Our Tree, Oil on linen, 4 x 10 feet, 2024
Matthew Napoli, Exhumation of the Opalized Fossil of my Body, 7 Million Years from Now, Painted on canvas with oil and natural pigment, handmade from fossiliferous shale foraged from the Weymouth geological formation in Massachusetts, 76 x 62 inches, 2024

About the artists

Julia Gould (b. 1999) is an American artist living and working in Baltimore, Maryland. Julia holds a Bachelor of Fine Art degree from the Maryland Institute College of Art, where she majored in Painting and minored in Printmaking (2022). Julia’s work has been exhibited and/or awarded by organizations such as the Baltimore Museum of Art, the YoungArts Foundation in Miami, Andrew Reed Gallery in Tribeca, T & Y Projects in Tokyo, and the National Society for Arts and Letters in Washington, DC. In addition, she has lectured in the Baltimore area and has exhibited in solo and invitational, juried exhibitions.

Matthew Napoli (b. 1993, Houston) is an oil painter based in Providence, Rhode Island. He holds a BFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art and an MFA from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth. He has also been a resident artist at the New York Academy of Art and at Chautauqua Visual Arts. His work has been exhibited and/or awarded by organizations including the Elizabeth Greenshields Foundation, Abigail Ogilvy Gallery, the AXA Art Prize, the Worcester Art Museum, and the New Bedford Art Museum. Napoli currently teaches at Bristol Community College and has previously taught at UMass Dartmouth and the Newport Art Museum.