Alyssa Monks: The Americans

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Alyssa Monks .125

Forum Gallery


Alyssa Monks

Forum Gallery  New York


Art and Writing: Our Unique Collaboration with the Extraordinary Alyssa Monks We’re television writers. We create characters, and then, gradually, we build stories around those characters, and write those stories down in a script. Eventually, we turn our scripts over to actors, directors, editors, composers— a host of others who all come together to bring these fictional characters and their stories to life. For the final season of The Americans, we came up with a character who was an artist: Erica Haskard. Bedridden with a terminal illness and married to a busy nuclear arms negotiator, Erica finds herself in the care of our hero, KGB spy Elizabeth Jennings, in disguise as a hospice nurse. Elizabeth is there to get Erica’s husband’s secrets. There was a lot of action in this story, but at its heart was the notion that our dedicated Soviet spy, a woman who sees the world in black and white, who doesn’t get the value of art at all, is moved by Erica’s paintings and ends up having her worldview shifted by art, of all things. It seemed to work on the page. But as production approached, we realized that for any of it to come alive on screen, we’d need to actually see our artist’s work. We had written an artist character and forgotten that we’d need her work to be every bit as true and dimensional as she was. We needed art. We weren’t sure exactly what we were looking for, but then we found Alyssa Monks.

Alyssa’s canvases, dark and dramatic, seemed almost extracted from Elizabeth Jennings’s psyche, long-repressed bursts of pain and suffering. Alyssa’s paintings also aligned perfectly with our vision for Erica and her struggle with mortality (her incredible canvas, Mother, captures a universal, haunting portrait of loss through the fading image of her own mother). If we had been smart enough to describe the art we were looking for, this would have been it. All we needed was for Alyssa to say “yes.” Which we weren’t sure she would do. She had to agree not just for us to use her art, but for the show to appropriate her original work as that of our fictional character, a dying, complicated, often bitter woman. To our great relief, Alyssa was game. But as the season began, we had no idea how much her artistic openness would mean for our show, or how wideranging—and gratifying—our collaboration would be. At first Alyssa provided us with canvases for Erica’s home, which meant that our set looked like an artist really lived there. Then she started to “artist-proof” scripts, suggesting small but significant changes for authenticity. She taught Miriam Shor, the actress playing Erica, how to sketch with charcoal. Alyssa spent days on set with our crew, working with directors and the art department to help create Erica’s artistic world.


But Alyssa’s greatest contribution to the collaboration was the original works she created for the character. Erica was dying—and we wanted her to draw a final piece as an expression of her loss of self. We had no idea how to tell Alyssa what to draw, but we knew how the character was feeling. We talked it through with Alyssa, focusing on Erica’s mindset, her long battle with illness, what we thought she’d want to evoke with her final drawing. At first, Alyssa drew several versions of a mother holding a child, all moving, but somehow none of us felt we were there yet. We talked more and Alyssa went away, going radio-silent in her studio for a few days. When she emerged, she had a remarkable drawing: a woman whose face was being erased, Alyssa’s perfect vision for Erica’s portrait of her own disappearance from the world. The more we talked, the more Alyssa’s process started blending into ours. Working with her rattled something inside of us, generating unexpected story as we wrote the final episodes. A dream emerged for Elizabeth, in bed with an old lover, Gregory Thomas, who was an art collector himself. Alyssa’s painting Mother would hang on his bedroom wall, and at his bedside, a similar canvas, but of Elizabeth’s own children, painted in the same haunting style. The scene worked for us on many levels . . . but Alyssa was presented with another challenge. Mother is a large-scale canvas. As non-artists, we did not understand the difficulty of bringing that same emotional impact to a smaller piece. Alyssa talked to us about the technical issues. We talked to her about what we were hoping to evoke emotionally. Once again, Alyssa disappeared into her studio for days on end. Once again, she

emerged with a remarkable piece: a powerful portrait of Elizabeth’s children in the style of Mother, capturing a heartbreaking sense of loss. As thanks for her incredible openness and collaboration, we decided to ask Alyssa if we could burn her masterpiece. Mother had been the canvas that originally drew us to Alyssa’s work. It was the piece that invaded Elizabeth’s dream. As we approached the end of the series, we found a story in which, after the artist’s death, Elizabeth is given the painting, and though she struggles with the decision, she ultimately decides to burn the canvas to protect her cover. We knew that Alyssa had painted Mother after her own mother died, and that it held tremendous emotional significance for her. We called her at her studio, paced in our office as we waited for her to pick up. When she answered, we said we had a big idea, but we’d understand if it didn’t feel right for her. We laid out the story, walking Alyssa through Elizabeth’s emotional decision to burn the painting. There was a long moment of silence on the other end of the line. Then Alyssa said, with heartfelt enthusiasm, “I love it.” For the record, we didn’t burn the actual canvas—we have special effects for that sort of thing. But Alyssa’s reaction is a testament to her artistic openness and generosity of spirit. She’s remarkably un-precious about her work—which, perhaps, makes her work all the more precious. Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg, executive producers of  The Americans


Soft, 2010 Oil on linen 48 x 72 inches Private Collection


Hole, 2017 Oil on linen 32 x 32 inches


Angst, 2017 Oil on linen 34 x 34 inches Collection of Rick and Monica Segal


Set, 2017 Oil on linen 32 x 32 inches


Return Study, 2017 Oil on panel 16 x 12 inches



Scream Drawing, 2017 Charcoal on paper 12 x 16 inches Private Collection, NY


Scream II, 2017 Oil on linen 36 x 54 inches Private Collection


Spread, 2017 Oil on panel 10 x 10 inches


Pink Horizon, 2017

Dawn, 2017

Oil on panel

Oil on panel

10 x 10 inches

12 x 12 inches


M

Foam, 2017 Oil on panel 16 x 12 inches


Smear, 2012 Oil on panel 11 x 16 inches Collection of Allison and Robert Munoz


Inka Drawing, 2017 Charcoal on paper 24 x 18 inches



Deaf, 2017 Oil on linen 30 x 30 inches



Closer, 2017 Oil on panel 6 x 6 inches


Dare, 2017

Cut, 2017

Oil on panel

Oil on panel

12 x 12 inches

10 x 10 inches

Collection of Julia Cardwell, Brighton, MA


Mortality (Mother), 2017 Oil on linen 66 x 56 inches



Face and Hand, 2017 Charcoal on paper 16 x 20 inches Collection of Chris Long, Venice, CA


M

Evolve Drawing, 2018 Charcoal on paper 16 x 20 inches Private Collection, NY


Henry and Paige, 2018 Oil on panel 8 x 10 inches Private Collection, NY




Biography BORN November 27, 1977 EDUCATION 2001 Graduate School of Figurative Art, New York Academy of Art; MFA cum laude 1999 Boston College, Chestnut Hill, MA; BA cum laude 1998 Lorenzo de’Medici, Art Institute of Florence SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2018 Spirit Songs; Gail Severn Gallery, Ketchum, ID 2017 Alyssa Monks; Pontone Gallery, London, UK 2016 Resolution; Forum Gallery, NY (catalogue) 2015 Nexxus Exxpress Yourself; New York Fashion Week Event, Nexxus New York Salon

GROUP EXHIBITIONS

Small is Beautiful; Flowers Gallery, New York, NY

2018 The New Baroque; Booth Gallery, NY

Contemporary Realism; Gallery 1261, Denver, CO

Peers & Influences; The Bo Bartlett Center, Columbus, GA

CRB; Contemprary Realism Biennial 2014; Fort Wayne Museum of Art, Fort Wayne, IN

Artists by Artists; The Artist as Subject, Forum Gallery, New York, NY

The Windows View; Eno Gallery, Hillsborough, NC

Re-presenting the Nude; Evoke Contemporary Gallery, Santa Fe, NM

Based on Actual Events; Jonathan Levine Gallery, New York, NY

2017–2018 Favorite Things; A Holiday Exhibition, Forum Gallery, New York, NY 2017 Introduction; Pontone Gallery, London

2013 Small Is Beautiful; Flowers Gallery, London, UK

Seeing With Our Own Eyes; Forum Gallery, New York, NY

Benetton Foundation’s Imago Mundi at the Venice Biennale; Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Italy

Forum Gallery Celebrates 55 Years of Modern and Contemporary Art; Forum Gallery, New York, NY

Venice Biennale; Fondazione Querini Stampalia, Venice, Italy

2013 Rolls Royce Icons of Art Series; The Walker Tower, NY

2016–2017 Contemporary Old Masters; Louisiana Art & Science Museum, Baton Rouge, LA

2016 Hour by Hour; Q Art Salon, Santa Ana, CA

Presence; Blue Gallery, Kansas City, MO

2012 Small Works; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA

2010 Fixation; David Klein Gallery, MI

20/21 – VISIONARY ARTISTS OF THE 21ST CENTURY; Forum Gallery, New York, NY

Oil and Water; DFN Gallery, NY (catalogue)

2009 New Paintings; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA

New Paintings; DFN Gallery, NY

2008 Flesh Painting; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA 2007 New Paintings; DFN Gallery, NY

Next of Kin; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA

2006 Below the Surface; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA

Dissolve; DFN Gallery, NY

2005 New Paintings; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA 2004 New Paintings; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA 2003 New Paintings; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA 2002 Surfacing; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA

American Views; Forum Gallery, New York, NY

The Looking Glass; Refraction through the Female Gaze; Mirus Gallery, San Francisco, CA Nudes; Hespe Gallery, San Francisco, CA 2012 Saturation; Jensen Gallery, Sydney, Australia Nosebleed; Fuse Gallery, NY

Good for You; David Klein Gallery, MI

Water/Bodies; New York Academy of Art at Southampton Arts Center, Southampton, NY

The Ones; New York Academy of Art, NY

2015 Nature Unbound; Forum Gallery, NY

Love is in the Air; The Cell, NY

Figurative I; Gallery 1261, Denver CO

From What I Remember/From What I Forget; Principle Gallery, VA

Unfurl; Gallery 1261, Denver, CO

Heads; Flowers Gallery, NY

Making Faces; David Klein Gallery, Birmingham, MI

2011 ICONOMANCY; New York Academy of Art, NY

Body // Water; Carla Massoni Gallery, Chestertown, MD

Paintworks; Gowanus Ballroom, NY

Space Invaders; Rose Contemporary, ME

The Artists Gaze; Sirona Gallery, Hallandale Beach, FL

Breach of Privacy; Carmichael Gallery, CA

Triple Threat; Island Weiss Gallery, NY

2014 Love It, Locket, Leave It; Island Weiss Gallery, New York, NY

Dark Water; Copro Gallery, CA

Naked; Jensen Gallery, Sydney, Australia

(I’ve Got a Secret); Forbes Galleries, NY


2010 Uncovered; Eden Rock Gallery, St. Barth’s, French West Indies

Compact; Impact; The Center for Contemporary Art, Bedminster, NJ

Fresh Figures & Abstraction; Scott White Contemporary Art, CA

Remnants; Fuse Gallery, NY

Flashpoint; Alyssa Monks & Tom Birkner; The Noyes Museum, Stockton College, NJ

Intimacy; Kunst Museum Ahlen, Germany

Between Realities; Principle Gallery, VA

AWARDS 2007 New York Academy of Art Summer Exhibition, First Prize, Juried Exhibition 2006 Grant for Painting, Elizabeth Greensheilds Foundation, Quebec, Canada, 2003- 2006 2001 Travel Grant to Normandy, France at the Chateaux Balleroy; Forbes Foundation MEMBER Board of Trustees, New York Academy of Art, 2010–present

2009 Water/Bodies; Eden Rock Gallery, St. Barths

Bods, Rethinking the Figure; Robert Kidd Gallery, MI

Baptized Catholic; Artbreak Gallery, Brooklyn, NY

Reconfigured and Relocated; DFN Gallery, NY

PUBLICATIONS Zeller, Robert. The figurative artists handbook; a contemporary guide to figure drawing, painting, and composition. Monacelli Studio, 2016, p. 288-291.

Reconfiguring the Body in American Art, 1820– 2009; National Academy Museum of Fine Arts, NY

Fischl, Eric, and Vincent Desiderio. Alyssa Monks; Oil & Water, 2005-2014. GHP Media, 2016.

Abstract/Nature; DFN Gallery, NY

“Alyssa Monks; Resolution,” Exhibition Catalogue, Forum Gallery, New York, 2016.

Personal Territory; David Klein Gallery, MI

Paper Beings; Hespe Gallery, CA

“Alyssa Monks; Oil & Water,” Exhibition Catalogue, DFN Gallery, New York, 2010.

2008 Dangerous Women; DFN Gallery, NY

“Alyssa Monks; Resolution,” Blouin Gallery Guide, April 2016, p. 8-9 and cover. “Alyssa Monks; Resolution.” American Art Collector, April 2016, pp. 90–91. “30 Most Influential Women Artists Alive Today,” Graphic Design Degree Hub, February 2016 “Astonishing Photo-Realistic Portraits You Won’t Believe Were Painted by Hand.” CNN. Web. 23 October 2015. Nadine, Ajaka. “The Rustic Renewal of a Brooklyn Artist.” The Atlantic. Web. 20 October 2015. Figueroa, Miguel. “Seeing Your True Colors.” Vamp Magazine, 15 October 2015, No. 4; p. 56-7. Zhang, Jenny. Interview. “Photorealistic Oil Paintings Capture Intimate Portraits of Human Vulnerability.” My Modern Met. Web. 12 October 2015. Kaminska, Paulina. Interview. “Interview with Alyssa Monks.” Artophilia. Web. 6 October, 2015. Dalton, John. Interview. “Creating the Space for Connections with Alyssa Monks.” John Dalton Art. Web. 13 September 2015. Interview. “Alyssa Monks; The Illusion of Reality.” Silverlake Voice. Web. 2 September 2015. The Moth, Summer 2015, No. 21; p. 4 and 30. Interview. “Alyssa Monks; Hyper-Realistic Painting.” Issue No. 2016. Web. 12 August 2015.

2007 Summer Exhibition; New York Academy of Art, NY

SELECTED ARTICLES/REVIEWS

Wet; DFN Gallery, NY 2006 An Assessment of Contemporary Figuration; David Klein Gallery, MI

Interview. Thomas, June. “The Real Artist Behind The Americans’ Fictional Painter Talks About Her Experience on the Show, Slate, April 6, 2018.

2005 7th Annual Realism Invitational; Jenkins Johnson Gallery, CA

“The Americans; The Real-Life Russian Saga That Inspired the Final Season,” Vanity Fair, March 28, 2018

Lin, Christin. Interview. “Alyssa Monks; The Photograph as a Painter’s Bully and Helper.” Epoch Times. 20 June 2015.

2004 Still life; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA

Solosky, Alexis. “‘The Americans’ Goes Dark(er), With Help From a Painter,” The New York Times, March 23, 2018.

Turnery, Sam. Interview. “Awesome Advice from Top Realism Artists.” Zippi. 22 May 2015.

Interview. “Challenge Your Thinking.” Dr. Linda Tucker Podcast, March 2017.

Green, Rob. “Haunting and Intimate Paintings.” Wall Hop. Web. 15 April 2015.

Lemmon, Jackie. “Alyssa Monks.” Beautiful Bizarre Magazine, Mar. 2017, pp. 66–77.

Hafesh, Louise. “Snap and Chat.” The Artist’s Magazine, April 2015; cover and p. 46–51.

Interview. “Alyssa Monks; Grace and Harmony.” Hoctok. Web. 22 December 2016.

Robbins, Sarah. “Connection; An Essay by Alyssa Monks.” Dirty Laundry Mag. Web. March 2015.

2003 Figures; J. Cacciola Gallery, NJ 2002 Interiors; Sarah Bain Gallery, CA 2001

“Think These Are Photos? Look Closely.” The San Francisco Globe. Web. 20 July 2015.


Webb, Shenyah. “Artist Feature; Alyssa Monks.” Nailed Magazine. Web. 4 February 2015.

Oil Artist Interview & Studio Visit.” Warholian. Web. 27 October 2010.

Keates, Nancy. “No Nudes is Good Nudes,” Wall Street Journal, February 2014.

Rose, Joshua. “Alyssa Monks; Fixation.” American Art Collector. October 2010, No. 60; p. 156 and cover.

McCann, Margaret. The Figure; Painting, Drawing, and Sculpture, New York, NY; Skira Rizzoli, 2014.

Li, David. “Her Art Really Imitates Life.” New York Post. 21 September 2010.

Piowaty, Deanna Elaine. “Women Under Glass; The Paintings of Alyssa Monks.” Combustus. Web. 7 September 2014.

American Art Collector, January 2010; cover.

Jacklitsch, Trent. Interview. “Tone.” Vimeo. Web. July 2014.

“Artist Creates Incredible Paintings that Look Like Photographs.” Daily Mail, September 2009.

“Alyssa Monks; Where Realism and Abstraction Meet.” Nuo Magazine. Web. 3 July 2014.

“Stunning Art that Looks Like Photos.” UK Metro, September 2009.

Price, Marsha. “Alyssa’s Brooklyn Artist Studio; Workspace Tour,” Apartment Therapy, online, 2013.

Menedez, Didi. Interview. “Alyssa Monks; Self-Portraits.” Oranges & Sardines, Summer 2009; cover.

“Painter Renders Photographic Images,” Yahoo News, online, July 2012.

Ayers, Robert. “Review.” ARTnews, June 2009.

Marinho, Rafaela. “Artista Americana Alyssa Monks Cria Rostos Realistas Em Pinturas à Oleo.” GQ Brazil. Web. July 2012. “Photoreal Paintings by Alyssa Monks.” Juxtapoz Magazine. Web. 5 June 2012. Maidman, Daniel. “Rock and Roll.” HuffPost Arts & Culture. Web. 27 May 2012. Strick, Charlotte. “Women by Women.” The Paris Review, Winter 2011, No. 199.. “Alyssa Monks; Metafora Claritatii in Difuziune,” Luxury Rich & Famous, November 2011. Lee-Tullis, James. Interview. “Picture Perfect? Introducing the Remarkable Hyperrealist Art of Alyssa Monks.” Departures. Web. 10 December 2011. Romero, Karla. Interview. “Alyssa Monks; Interview.” Humanize Magazine, 10 November 2011, No. 13: p. 26–43. The Blind Architect. Interview. “Empty Kingdom Interview; Alyssa Monks.” Empty Kingdom. Web. 6 June 2011. Cuffe, Michael. Interview. “Alyssa Monks; Contemporary

“Photo-realistic Paintings by Alyssa Monks.” Telegraph, September 2009.

Fenton, Laura. “Exclusive; Alyssa Monks Talks About Her Bathing Beauties.” Flavorwire. Web. 15 April 2009. Hodges, Michael. “Photorealists Make Painting Come to Life.” The Detroit News. Web. March 2009. Painter, Alysia Gray. “Los Angeles Art Show; Pucker Up and Kiss It.” NBC Los Angeles. Web. January 2009. Monks, Alyssa. “No Place Like Home.” Harper’s Magazine, November 2008; p. 31. Baldwin, Rosecrans. “Come Hell; Alyssa Monks.” The Morning News. Web. January 2008.

COLLECTIONS Eric Fischl Howard Tullman Gerrity Lansing Danielle Steele Savannah College of Art and Design Museum of Art, Savannah, GA Fullerton College Seavest Collection Luciano Benetton The Center for Contemporary Art, Bedminster, NJ FILM & TELEVISION FEATURES The Americans (television series), created by Joseph Weisberg, produced by Joel Fields and Joseph Weisberg , FX series, season 6, 2018 What Maisie Knew (film), directed by Scott McGehee and David Siegel, Millennium Films, 2013 The Beautiful Awful (filmed lecture), TEDx Talks, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN, 2015


FORUM GALLERY 475 Park Avenue at 57th Street New York, NY 10022 (212) 355 – 4545 forumgallery.com

A L L S E T P H OTO G R A P H S

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2018 FX NE T WORKS

C ATA LO G U E D E S I G N E D B Y H A N S T E E N S M A / I M P R E S S WILLIAMSBURG, MASSACHUSET TS J. S . M C C A R T H Y P R I N T E R S , AU G U S TA , M A I N E


Alyssa Monks .125

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