
Tribeca, New York
Louis Eisner
Louis Eisner
The Journal GalleryIf you scratch the surface, as the saying goes, it does two things. It can reveal an underlying truth, but also leave a scar of insight. If you scratch the surface of Louis Eisner’s slippery, somber canvases—which often show enigmatic, semi-composed spaces that might read like police photos from an art heist—you might be surprised to find that some of the image comes off like a mask. On the surface are carefully applied glazes of gelid oil color—lift the layers and you see the black-and-white image, like a sketch or blueprint of what’s to come, underneath. Traditional approaches like this are now called indirect painting, but as any art historian will tell you, five or six centuries ago this basic method of oil painting was just known as painting. It was part of what made a Van Eyck a Van Eyck. And “layers,” as any art director will tell you, are also part of what makes Photoshop Photoshop. That’s not a glib aside when discussing the painter’s work. The Los Angeles-raised, Columbia-educated painter has been associated with the ad hoc movement of faux-fauves reviving naïve figuration. But there’s nothing naïve here. Increasingly, what sets Eisner’s work apart is how he carefully considers and collapses distinctions between what we think of as entirely separate technologies, aesthetic genres and periods, creating new conversations between them. He then unites them with his own sensibility, a strong feeling of personal perspective and history, creating glimpses both out of and into this semi-public, cloistered consciousness. As a result, his synthesized and completed canvases manage to represent two very different things: one, the idealized mind and method of the classical painter; and two, the very real state of being human today, of filtering down the world into only what is essential. So yes, Eisner may use techniques most associated with Old Master painters rather than Impressionists. But he looks for subjects—a hand in glove, a snap of the artist’s brother, a photo of Cézanne’s studio, an underexposed picture of a dark, parquet-floored room—with the same sense of l’observation passionnée that Baudelaire used to define “The Painter of Modern Life,” over 150 years ago. At the same time, his subjects intuitively echo the spontaneous, often random way we use the camera-phone today—and how it has become a painter of modern life itself. In a similar blurrealist reversal, instead of using photography as the pre-Raphaelites did, to capture every detail of a perfect fantasy, Eisner de-escalates. He paints from photographs, but introduces a sense of 1980s-era granularity to his paintings (or noise, as Photoshop calls it, which can boost or reduce it). This boosts the offhand, snapshot feeling they have of paper-photo objecthood, a lo-fi quality that DSLRs and megapixel sensors are doing their best to delete. And it’s that frozen split-second, the ephemeral eternal, which might be one of the truest expressions of contemporary art. Micro over macro, personal and universal, minimal and maximal, indirect and direct—Eisner compresses all these layers and more into one millimeter-thin oil-emulsion film. —David Colman Louis Eisner was born in Los Angeles, California, in 1988. He received a BA from Columbia University. Eisner's recent solo and group exhibitions include "Frogs" at Bortolami Gallery in New York, New York (2025); "Trees" at Galerie Pepe in Mexico City, Mexico (2024); "Persona Non Grata" at Winter Street Gallery in Edgartown, Massachusetts (2024); "Fictional Syntheses" at Kraupa-Tuskany Zeidler in Berlin, Germany (2024); "Everyone Loves Picabia" at David Lewis Gallery in New York, New York (2024); "New York, N. Why?" at Gems in New York, New York (2024); "Yours Truly" at Nahmad Contemporary in New York, New York (2024); "Manic Pixie Nightmare Drawings" at Adler Beatty Gallery in New York, New York (2024); "The American Baroque" at Sebastian Gladstone in Los Angeles, California (2024); "Arcadia and Elsewhere" at James Cohan in New York, New York (2024); "A Room On Her Own" at Peana in Mexico City, Mexico (2023); "Painting and Sculpture" at The Fireplace Project in East Hampton, New York (2023); "Flash and Flowers" at No Name in Paris, France (2023); "Apocalypse Now" at The Journal Gallery in Chora, Greece (2023); "Works on Paper: 100 years" at Amanita in New York, New York (2023); "Basel Social Club" at Basel Social Club in Basel, Switzerland (2023); "Leaving Cheyenne" at Fitzpatrick Gallery in Paris, France (2022); "Slag Pots" at Manual Arts in Los Angeles, California (2022); and The Journal Gallery in New York, New York (2021). Louis Eisner lives and works in New York, New York.
