Tristan Hoare Gallery
Skip to main content
  • Menu
  • Home
  • Artists
  • Exhibitions
  • Events
  • Art Fairs
  • Press
  • Book Store
  • Viewing room
  • Contact
Cart
0 items £
Checkout

Item added to cart

View cart & checkout
Continue shopping
Menu

Of Birds and Monkeys: Kiki Smith & Paolo Colombo

Past exhibition
14 February - 20 March 2020
  • Overview
  • Installation Views
  • Press
  • Works
  • Kiki Smith  Forager A, 2017  Gold Plated Bronze  29.2 x 19.3 x 10 cm  Edition 3  Edition of 13 + 1 AP
  • Kiki Smith  Cloudburst, 2017  Aluminium  27.9 x 28.5 x 28.5 cm  Edition 6  Edition of 13 + 2 APs
  • Paolo Colombo  Untitled (Hand), 2019  Watercolour on paper  68 x 87 cm
  • Kiki Smith  Sunrise, Sunset, 2016  Aluminium  33 x 32.3 x 0.8 cm  Edition 8  Edition of 13 + 1 AP
  • Paolo Colombo, Monkey IV, 2019
  • Paolo Colombo, Untitled (Flower), 2019
  • Paolo Colombo, Untitled (Window), 2020
next
prev
View image gallery

Paolo Colombo’s deeply lyrical watercolours and Kiki Smith’s mythically charged metal sculptures draw inspiration from the natural world. These works also arise from a fascination with process, fusing a clarity of form with the particularities of texture, gesture, and tone. Both artists display a commitment to the potential of work by hand that coalesces like a flash of insight, lucid and enigmatic. Both artists invite us to think in layers, through the palimpsests of material and the condensations of action. The animals in Colombo’s and Smith’s art—monkeys, birds, hares, deer—embody and recognise our own instincts with uncanny precision.

 

Kiki Smith’s small scale silver, aluminium or bronze sculpture reveal themselves slowly: shifting as we encounter them. These elemental creatures refuse fixed meaning: a bird with a worm could be a symbol for freedom, discipline, vulnerability, or the culmination of a spiritual journey.  Each piece emerges from and contains a multitude of transmuting stories. These animals are in a moment of movement—hunting, mating, flying—and strike us with their urgency and grace.  Smith gives keen attention to the peculiarities and habits of bodies. Her sculptures ask us to go over them again and again, reconfiguring our relationship to what they represent.

 

Paolo Colombo’s paintings open inward through levels of different texture.  At times, over a wash with dense and translucent variations in pigment, we find a gauze-like layer painted by regularly repeated lines gives way through what appears as organic or geometric openings into an inner layer, containing white space, petals, or black and white checkerboards.

 

In his figurative work, as if embroidered on swaths of fabric we see  a recognisable shape: a monkey holding a stone, a hand in an instant of restful touch. These appear like thoughts, personal and enigmatic.  Tears in the soft patterns, as if in organdie, draw our attention through the field of lines conjured by slow, extended labour into the feeling of a moment.  We see a monkey looking back at us. We see a hand touching one of 36,000 tassels, painted one-by-one. Paintings like these bring us into a world of vigilance, hypnotically focused, evoking touch and instinct, labour and care.

 

Andrea Applebee – author, poet and editor based in Athens, Greece.

Related artist

  • Paolo Colombo

    Paolo Colombo

Share
  • Facebook
  • X
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Email
Back to exhibitions
Manage cookies
Copyright © 2025 Tristan Hoare Gallery
Site by Artlogic
Instagram, opens in a new tab.
Ocula, opens in a new tab.
Send an email

This website uses cookies
This site uses cookies to help make it more useful to you. Please contact us to find out more about our Cookie Policy.

Manage cookies
Accept

Cookie preferences

Check the boxes for the cookie categories you allow our site to use

Cookie options
Required for the website to function and cannot be disabled.
Improve your experience on the website by storing choices you make about how it should function.
Allow us to collect anonymous usage data in order to improve the experience on our website.
Allow us to identify our visitors so that we can offer personalised, targeted marketing.
Save preferences