Linnéa Gabriella Spransy

Againing, Los Angeles, June 29 - August 17, 2024

In our smaller gallery, Los Angeles-based artist Linnéa Gabriella Spransy presents recent paintings and drawings that articulate the interrelation of destruction, transformation and discovery. Spransy works in two primary, divergent media - intricate, art-deco inspired, large-scale figurative drawings in pastel on paper; and mathematical, procedurally determined abstraction in acrylic on canvas. In between, experiments in merging the two styles or working on different materials appear - but the heart of Spransy’s work is always drawing. Her hand is lithe and fluid, and renders line vibrant and dynamic. This tight survey of her dynamic practice highlights themes of exploration, discovery, and care for the collective over the individual. Spransy’s recent large-scale works in pastel on paper revel in the exuberant transformations and interdependencies of specific plants and animals. The species she features, other than humans, often exist in a reproductive imperative that requires mature adults to sacrifice themselves for the continuation of their collective existence. This poetic melodrama for the sake of the next generation is paired with an exploration of symbiotic relationships between species, highlighting the multitude of entanglements of care that support our world. Drawn with an ornate, energetic, almost art-deco style, these works, like the relationships they describe, are exquisitely calibrated. Each living thing occupies its niche and each element is enveloped by its neighbor, making room for one another. The mortality inherent in the natural world is a force of transformation more than destruction: species like the Madagascar Suicide Palm tree may expire in their energetic effort to produce an efflorescence of over a million blooms, but it lives on, multiplied, in the uncertain fate of as many seeds. The interlocked grip of continuity and change is suffused with the glow of this central, sacred contradiction - that death and life are indivisible.
Linnéa Gabriella Spransy, Againing