Nicholas Metivier Gallery is delighted to announce Enfleurage, an exhibition of new paintings and works on paper by Vancouver-based artist Bobbie Burgers. The exhibition will open on January 11th, 2025 and be on view through February 1st, 2025. Please join us for an opening reception with the artist on Saturday, January 11th from 1-3PM. Please RSVP here.
Bobbie Burgers’ latest series of paintings represents a marked shift in both their composition and source of inspiration. While previous series have evolved out of Burgers’ personal experiences, Enfleurage draws from a book by Jean-Claude Ellena titled The Atlas of Perfumed Botany, an exploration of the creation of perfumes. Burgers connected immediately to the complexities of extracting scents from flowers. For several years now, she has been gradually distilling flowers with paint into their most abstracted, minimal forms.
Enfleurage derives its title from the process by which florals are laid down on glass and pressed into the surface. Burgers envisions this technique in paint and other mixed media, creating more layering and density in her work more than ever before. Her floral subjects appear bold and energetically pushed up against the surface of the paintings, while lighter stains and other expressive mark-marking evoke the extracted liquid.
"In one technique, called enfleurage, petals are carefully layered in an odorless fat to extract scent over days, and then removed and replaced with fresh flowers until a concentrated scent is captured. Reading about the difficulty of isolating aromas from natural materials, I started to draw parallels between the techniques and processes of perfumery and the work I was producing in the studio." - Bobbie Burgers
Accompanying her dramatic canvases are several works on paper. It is a medium that has become essential to her practice, the paper informing the canvas and vice versa as a way of evolution through self-referencing. For Burgers, paper encourages experimentation including elements of collage as well as printing large sections of her paintings on the paper as a foundation to respond to with a variety of materials.