Madeleine Tonzi - "Petrichor"
Hashimoto Contemporary is pleased to present Petrichor, a solo exhibition by Los Angeles-based artist Madeleine Tonzi. The exhibition will be Tonzi's third solo exhibition at Hashimoto Contemporary, and debut presentation at our Minnesota Street location.
Opening Night Reception:
Saturday, June 1st
5pm - 7pm
Gallery Hours:
Tuesday - Saturday / 10am - 6pm
Hashimoto Contemporary SF
1275 Minnesota Street
San Francisco, CA 94107
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 sf@hashimotocontemporary.com.
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Madeleine Tonzi, Chamisa Skies, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Weathervane, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Hyphae, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Petrichor, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Terrachrome, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Nautilus, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Totality, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Lichen, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Subterra, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Petra, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Ichor, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Piñon, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Ambrosia, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Geosmin, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Moonbow, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Metamorphic, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Fire Rainbow, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Orogeny, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Weathervane Trace Print, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Ode to Agnes, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Transmogrify, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Midnight Weathervane, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Igneous, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Where the Rainbow Touches Ground, 2024
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Madeleine Tonzi, Ascend, 2024
Imagine the air thick with the aroma of sage, wet soil, and piñon—scents the rain has unearthed from the dry, arid ground after months of drought. For artist Madeleine Tonzi, these aromas transports her to Santa Fe, her hometown defined by the mountains, the ponderosa pines, and the aspen forests. Petrichor, the earthy scent that follows rainfall, is also the title of Tonzi’s latest solo exhibition at Hashimoto Contemporary. Through a new series of archway-shaped paintings that act as portals to places that could be, Tonzi wonders how we can be in the right relation to and with land, rectifying the moments we find ourselves struggling against natural—and inevitable—cycles of life.
Floating conch shells, bending tulips, and totems of triangles held in half-dome bowls rest on window sills, levitating floors, and inside rainbow-like archways in the foreground of Tonzi’s scenes. The painter often colors her work according to the seasons as an attempt to ground herself in the Earth’s cycles amid an anthropocentric culture that resists them (work must always be done, come thunderstorms or heat waves). Rendering her worlds in shades of brown, sienna, sage, and dusty pink, these works wear the palette of a world more closely aligned with the land; a world where we view ourselves as part of nature rather than separated from it. This rhythmic play between the paintings’ imposed architecture and imagined ecologies creates a single composition, confusing where human-made ends and natural begins.
The scenes deconstruct themselves, breaking the painting’s fourth wall. In Terrachrome, a waterfall spills out of the dirt-brown circular frame that rings around the rocky mountainous landscape in a dark green silhouette; the tulips, half-moons, raindrops, and seashells leap forward to pollinate a new ecosystem closer to our world. These explosions of creation, perhaps forced by disaster, are fitting for a show titled Petrichor. The Greek word combines the term pétra, rock, with ikhṓr, the ethereal blood of the gods, combining the natural world with something mystic, something sacred. Like the scent that rises from wet soil, the works in Petrichor recall a specific place and a renewed—reconstructed—love for it. “A love,” as environmental psychologist Glenn Albrecht puts it, “of the totality of our place relationships, and a willingness to accept the political responsibility for protecting and conserving them at all scales.” Tonzi asks us to consider our relations to land just as we might consider the relations between the moon and a mountain; a flower and the rain.
Petrichor opens on Saturday, June 1st with a reception from 5 pm - 7 pm at 1275 Minnesota Street. The artist will be in attendance. The exhibition is on view June 1st - 29th. For more information on the exhibition or exclusive content and images, contact SF@hashimotocontemporary.com.