Tuesday 22 February 2022

Pilar Corrias Gallery

Triumph of Femininity

Criticisms of Paul Gauguin in the art of a diasporic painter

Painting: Gisela McDaniel / Photograph: Agnes Prygiel


    Gisela McDaniel’s exhibition at the Pilar Corrias gallery in Savile Row in Mayfair showcases a collection of paintings of beautiful women in sexually confident poses, with pieces of jewellery attached to their faces. The artist mounts artificial flowers and small objects belonging to her sitters onto the canvas, making her works 3-dimensional, using the space on the sides as the continuation of the painting. 


Painting: Gisela McDaniel / Photograph: Agnes Prygiel


    The series of images and the accompanying sounds focus on diasporic Chamorro women, the indigenous community of the Mariana Islands in the North Pacific, who suffered sexual abuse and Colonial imposition

    McDaniel's strong criticisms of Paul Gauguin in her works is of significant importance. The Post-Impressionist was widely known for his fascination with the indigenous women of French Polynesia, who became the subjects of his paintings. 

    It was customary for the European colonists to take young females, often underage, as wives. Gauguin's controversial marriage to a 13-year old Teha'amana, as well as his later relationships, were not legally binding. By today's standards, his approach to young women would qualify as child abuse. As there is no legitimate record of the unions and because of their temporary nature, the artist's debatable private life is often dismissed as fiction, although he wrote about his experiences broadly in the letters to his friends. 



Gisela McDaniel's exhibition at Pilar Corrias gallery / Photograph: Agnes Prygiel

    Gisela puts beautiful women at the centre of her paintings. She also brings the attention back to the marginalised recollections of tribal minorities. Unlike Gauguin, she gives her sitters a voice, asks for their consent and makes their stories personal. She portrays her subjects in spaces that feel safe and inclusive. The pictures are linked to intimate recordings, where private confessions are being shared.

    There is a lot of sexual assertiveness and boldness in the artworks, as if in contrast to the underlying topic of exploitation. McDaniel’s luscious paintings are so suggestive, you almost want to smell the flowers mounted on top of the canvases. Pilar Corrias' gallery forms a stunning background for the elevated art experience


Paintings: Gisela McDaniel / Photographs: Agnes Prygiel


    In 1971 an art critic Peter Fuller wrote about Penny Slinger's first solo exhibition in Angela Flowers gallery in London: "It is a documentation of the role of one woman in a world still dominated by concepts of male superiority (...)". The comment is relevant to McDaniel's artistic work today. The difference is that this time it is not just one vulnerable female who speaks up, but many. 

    There is a sense of a collective experience of molestation and violation that women wish to be open about these days, claiming their stories and retelling them through the prism of their sensitivity, owning their physicality and eroticism. The exhibition is a triumph of femininity over the ages of misogyny in art. 


London 22.02.2022

Agnes Prygiel