Joseph Yaeger's latest exhibition, 'Polygrapher', is a deeply personal and confessional work that delves into the darker corners of the human experience. The show, which marks the artist's first solo exhibition with prestigious London gallery Modern Art, is a sprawling exploration of guilt, shame, and the search for truth.
At its core, 'Polygrapher' is an investigation into the nature of honesty and deception. Yaeger has taken the concept of polygraph testing – a lie detector that measures physiological responses to detect deception – and turned it on himself. The exhibition features a transcript of a fictional polygraph test, in which the artist's answers are presented as a fragmented and often disturbing narrative.
The paintings themselves are like fragments of raw memory, with faces and bodies twisted into impossible contortions. They seem to hold their breaths, frozen in a perpetual state of anxiety. But beneath the surface, Yaeger has left a trail of scars – literally, in the case of his watercolour paintings on gesso canvas, which reveal the layers of paint that have been stripped away.
For Yaeger, art is both a form of confession and a way of dealing with his own anxieties. He works tirelessly ahead of schedule, driven by a sense of unease that only he can articulate. And it's this sense of discomfort that gives 'Polygrapher' its dark intensity – an unflinching examination of the human psyche that is both mesmerizing and terrifying.
In many ways, Yaeger's Catholic upbringing has influenced his work – Clean Windows Kill Birds, in which a woman's face is seen through the screen of a confessional booth, is one of many overtly Catholic paintings he has made. But even this is subverted by the artist's use of watercolour and gesso, which creates a sense of disconnection between the sacred and the profane.
Ultimately, 'Polygrapher' is an exhibition about the search for truth – not in the classical sense, but in the sense that it's a constant and ongoing process. Yaeger's paintings are like fragments of a dream world – disturbing, unsettling, and yet fascinatingly compelling. They invite us to peer into their depths, to confront our own fears and anxieties head-on.
'Polygrapher' is on at Modern Art, 8 Bennet Street, London, from November 15 to January 17.
At its core, 'Polygrapher' is an investigation into the nature of honesty and deception. Yaeger has taken the concept of polygraph testing – a lie detector that measures physiological responses to detect deception – and turned it on himself. The exhibition features a transcript of a fictional polygraph test, in which the artist's answers are presented as a fragmented and often disturbing narrative.
The paintings themselves are like fragments of raw memory, with faces and bodies twisted into impossible contortions. They seem to hold their breaths, frozen in a perpetual state of anxiety. But beneath the surface, Yaeger has left a trail of scars – literally, in the case of his watercolour paintings on gesso canvas, which reveal the layers of paint that have been stripped away.
For Yaeger, art is both a form of confession and a way of dealing with his own anxieties. He works tirelessly ahead of schedule, driven by a sense of unease that only he can articulate. And it's this sense of discomfort that gives 'Polygrapher' its dark intensity – an unflinching examination of the human psyche that is both mesmerizing and terrifying.
In many ways, Yaeger's Catholic upbringing has influenced his work – Clean Windows Kill Birds, in which a woman's face is seen through the screen of a confessional booth, is one of many overtly Catholic paintings he has made. But even this is subverted by the artist's use of watercolour and gesso, which creates a sense of disconnection between the sacred and the profane.
Ultimately, 'Polygrapher' is an exhibition about the search for truth – not in the classical sense, but in the sense that it's a constant and ongoing process. Yaeger's paintings are like fragments of a dream world – disturbing, unsettling, and yet fascinatingly compelling. They invite us to peer into their depths, to confront our own fears and anxieties head-on.
'Polygrapher' is on at Modern Art, 8 Bennet Street, London, from November 15 to January 17.