Martine Johanna - "A Particular Ghost"
Hashimoto Contemporary is pleased to present a solo exhibition by Netherland-based painter Martine Johanna. The exhibition will be Johanna's second solo exhibition at Hashimoto Contemporary.
Opening Night Reception:
Saturday, January 13th
6pm - 8pm
Gallery Hours:
Tuesday - Saturday / 10am - 6pm
Hashimoto Contemporary LA
2754 S La Cienega Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90034
Advance Collector's Preview:
An advance collector's preview will be made available online before the exhibition opens, if you would like to receive a price list, please contact us at la@hashimotocontemporary.com.
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Martine Johanna, A Round Object Has No Sharp Edge, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Floating Voices, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Slow Motion, 2023
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Martine Johanna, A Gathering of Thoughts, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Fading, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Something Heavy and Light, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Daughter, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Glow, 2022
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Martine Johanna, Wishing Room, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Bittersweet, 2022
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Martine Johanna, Silent, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Ritual for a Small Death, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Who is Who, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Hysteria, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Seperation, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Night Gardening, 2023
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Martine Johanna, Northern Forest, 2023
Martine Johanna’s ghosts are overwhelmingly female hauntings, emphasized and lamented in the artist’s solo exhibition A Particular Ghost at Hashimoto Contemporary. The figures in Johanna’s paintings and drawings embody restless, ghostly fragments, illustrating how women's pleasure is entwined with the symbolic death of societal acceptance. Using rich greens and pinks or electric blues and yellows, the Dutch artist depicts these women confronting the viewer in ecstasy or turning inward to grieve the lack of mental freedom in the moments after. Throughout this entrancing series of works, the artist weaves a compelling narrative linking social ostracization to orgasmic pleasure and safety, expanding the idiom “small death.”
Each new painting peeks into Johanna’s private world, where she grapples with women’s hypervisibility and invisibility. Though it’s difficult not to stare at the women in explicitly sexual positions, the figures don’t return the same fascinated gaze, looking through the viewer as though our presence is inconsequential. The artist also captures quiet moments with visible tension through imagined scenes like disembodied ghosts. Depicted as floating architecture enveloped by ethereal fog or precious gems hovering inside an aurora, the synthesis of women’s bodies and haunted landscapes evoke the many ways women are made invisible: silence, omission, force.
Bearing titles like A Round Object Has No Sharp Edge and A Ritual for a Small Death, the works in this exhibition aptly display society's double bind of harm and intimacy, of sexuality and humiliation. The emotional aspects of these works stems from Johanna's own emotional transformation as she confronts her discomfort around the women she paints, instilled by her religious upbringing. In publicizing these feelings, the artist entrusts her discomfort to someone else, releasing her female specters from the safety of her mind into the danger of reality. As such, each artwork holds a prayer for these ghosts to ensure a safe passage to another realm. In a perfect world, the ghosts that haunt Johanna could simply disappear.
A Particular Ghost opens on January 13th with a reception from 6-8 pm and remains on view through February 3rd. The artist will attend the opening. For additional information, images, or exclusive content, please email LA@hashimotocontemporary.com.