Jackie Saccoccio Echo

March 13 - April 25, 2015

Main Gallery

View

Jackie Saccoccio


Portrait (Beauty)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Edge)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Installation view

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Nameless)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Installation view

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Blockhead)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Spiral)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Regal)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Installation view

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Pool)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Installation view

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Soft)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Installation view

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Doom)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Jackie Saccoccio

Portrait (Trickle)
2015
oil and mica on linen
57 x 45 inches

Jackie Saccoccio

Square Portrait (Ass)
2015
oil and mica on linen
79 x 79 inches

Installation view

Jackie Saccoccio

Square in Hole
2015
oil and mica on linen
79 x 79 inches

Jackie Saccoccio

Square Portrait (Flourish)
2015
oil and mica on linen
79 x 79 inches

Jackie Saccoccio

Square Portrait 2
2015
oil and mica on linen
79 x 79 inches

Press Release

Opening: Friday, March 13, 6:00-8:00pm

CHICAGO— Corbett vs. Dempsey is pleased to announce Echo , an exhibition of new paintings by Jackie Saccoccio. This is the first full-scale show of Saccoccio’s work in Chicago.

Continuing and deepening her approach to abstract portraiture, Saccoccio’s newest paintings balance various contradictory forces – explosive energy, atmospheric and diaphanous space, majestic compositional sensibility, and radiant color combinations, sometimes joyous, sometimes tinged with melancholy. Extending the post-painterly abstract techniques of pouring and staining, Saccoccio creates skeins of crisscrossing drip lines, often adding pure dry pigment to the wet paint, imbuing them with colors not normally seen in daily life.

Saccoccio has been a quiet but insistent presence on the American painting scene since the mid 1990s. She received her MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1988, and has lived and worked in the Northeast ever since, basing herself in Connecticut and New York City. Over the last five years, Saccoccio’s visibility has risen dramatically, with a solo museum show at at the Museo D’Art Contemporanea in Genoa, Italy, a two-person show with Joanne Greenbaum at the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, and currently has work in a group exhibition at the Rose Art Museum in Waltham, Massachusetts, as well as critically lauded gallery shows at Eleven Rivington, in New York.