M.A. Peers

November 21, 2015 – January 2, 2016

M.A. Peers

Installation view.  2015

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2013
Oil on canvas
20 × 15 3/4"
 

(MAP15 01)

M.A. Peers

Ugolyok.  2012

Acrylic on paper

22 7/8 × 22 1/2"

 

(MAP15 02)

 

M.A. Peers

Chernushka.  2015

Oil on canvas

24 x 24”

 

(MAP15 03)

M.A. Peers

Snezhinka.  2015

Oil on canvas

24 x 24”

 

(MAP15 04)

M.A. Peers

Chernushka.  2015

Water-based oil paint on canvas

20 x 15 7/8”

 

(MAP15 05)

M.A. Peers

Snezhinka.  2014

Oil on canvas

20 ½ x 20 ½”

 

(MAP15 06)

M.A. Peers

Snezhinka.  2015

Oil on canvas

14 ¼ x 14”

 

(MAP15 07)

M.A. Peers

Snezhinka.  2015

Acrylic on canvas

10 x 10”

 

(MAP15 08)

M.A. Peers

Laika (study).  2002

Oil on masonite

8 3/8 x 7 7/8”

 

(MAP15 09)

M.A. Peers

Taken.  2015

Acrylic and oil on canvas on panel

72 ¼ x 72”

 

(MAP15 11)

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2012

Oil on canvas

20 x 20”

 

(MAP15 11)

M.A. Peers

Untitled Study.  2015

Oil on canvas

20 x 20”

 

(MAP15 12)

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2015

Oil on canvas

30 x 30”

 

(MAP15 13)

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2015

Water-based oil paint on canvas

30 x 30”

 

(MAP15 14)

M.A. Peers

Installation view.  2015

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2015

Water-based oil paint on canvas

72 1/8 x 72”

 

(MAP15 15)

M.A. Peers

Wrightwood NW3 Exterior.  2015

Acrylic on canvas

40 x 42 1/8”

 

(MAP15 16)

M.A. Peers

Chocolate Lab.  2014

Watercolor on paper

12 x 9”

 

(MAP15 17)

M.A. Peers

Chocolate Lab.  2014

Acrylic on paper

18 x 12 ¼”

 

(MAP15 18)

M.A. Peers

Chocolate Lab.  2015

Acrylic on paper

40 x 26”

 

(MAP15 19)

M.A. Peers

Cattle Dog.   2013

Acrylic on paper

17 x 13”

 

(MAP15 20)

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2013

Acrylic on paper

15 x 20”

 

(MAP15 21)

M.A. Peers

Christmas Tree.  2015

Acrylic on paper

47 x 34 ¾”

 

(MAP15 22)

M.A. Peers

Christmas Tree.  2015

Acrylic on canvas

72 x 72”

 

(MAP15 23)

M.A. Peers

Christmas Tree.  2015

Acrylic on paper

40 x 26”

 

(MAP15 24)

M.A. Peers

Christmas Tree.  2015

Acrylic on paper

49 ¾ x 38”

 

(MAP15 25)

M.A. Peers

Christmas Tree.  2015

Acrylic on paper

47 ¾ x 34”

 

(MAP15 26)

M.A. Peers

Christmas Tree.  2015

Acrylic on paper

36 1/8 x 24”

 

(MAP15 27)

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2015

Acrylic and enamel on canvas

72 x 72”

 

(MAP15 28)

M.A. Peers

Untitled.  2012

Acrylic on linen over masonite

20 ¼ x 16 1/8”

 

(MAP15 29)

Press Release

Rosamund Felsen Gallery is pleased to present the sixth solo show of paintings and works on paper by Los Angeles-based artist M.A. Peers. Peers’ new exhibition is a summation of the two idiosyncratic areas she has explored throughout her career -- dog portraiture and painterly abstraction.

Revisiting the subject matter that generated a surprising amount of exposure when initially presented anonymously at the Museum of Jurassic Technology, Peers’ latest group of canine portraits include several of the Cold War era Soviet space dogs alongside examples from her ongoing examination of purebred aesthetics.

Peers’ new landscape-derived abstractions offer a somewhat different take on the concept of “dogs in space”. Building on her previous body of abstractions which explored the inescapability of spatial illusionism through such reference points as the paranormal cultural meme of Mel’s Hole and Duchamp’s Étant donnés, the artist has been translating Romantic and Baroque painting idioms through her virtuosic painting vocabulary into abstract enunciations of the search areas she has encountered in the course of six years of Canine Nose Work practice.

Canine Nose Work is a competitive dog sport that has recently emerged from Southern California into international popularity. Based on bomb and drug detection training, Nose Work relies on interspecies communication of information derived from an olfactory landscape invisible to the human team members. The pairing of this essentially aesthetic articulation of space with de-pictorialised landscape painting traditions from the pinnacle of the Humanist era continue Peers’ ongoing skeptical examination of anthropocentric aesthetics, while offering a tentative point of departure.

M.A. Peers is a Los Angeles-based painter whose work has been exhibited internationally since her emergence from UCLA grad school in 1994.