No butterflies, no nothing

Mollie Conlee, Aidan Koch, Jane Margarette, Jade Forrest Marks, Brigid Moore, Leah Shirley

At Leila Greiche, New York, US

June 21 — July 30, 2022

Leila Greiche presents No butterflies, no nothing, a group exhibition showing the work of Mollie Conlee, Aidan Koch, Jane Margarette, Jade Forrest Marks, Brigid Moore, and Leah Shirley. The exhibition runs June 21 – July 30, 2022.

“Won’t make the same mistake again
Tryin’ to force myself but I can’t pretend
No, I’m far from it
No, it’s not coming
No butterflies, no nothing”


~ Erika de Casier

No butterflies, no nothing shows the transmogrification of human emotions in our post-demic reality. For some, such as myself, this season is a moment of re-emergence into the world following a prolonged state of trapped emotion. The chrysalis is the state of transition: out of a cocoon’s false sense of security, into the body of the butterfly.


The artists included in this exhibition use the form of the butterfly through varied mediums — glass and lenticular mosaics, wood carving ceramics, essence, painting, drawing. All work shows attentive crafting. We see Marks’ floating paper outlines, Conlee’s holographic collages, Shirely’s grouting and hand-cut mosaic tile, Koch’s butterfly net with the hand carved wooden handle and Margarette’s studio-fired ceramic. The practices are process informed. One senses the piecing together of a puzzle.

 

Conlee’s “Blue Butterfly (wheat)” and “Butterfly 3 (Psalm 23)” are from a lenticular mosaic series which began in 2016. In these works, each panel’s reflective surface is composed of hundreds or thousands of hand-cut fabric, plastic, paper, leather, or lenticular plastic pieces, and goes through subtle shifts with the viewer’s movement. Her body of work continuously plays on the holiness of the symbol and the necessity of its undoing. The piece shifts and changes, dissolving what we think is there, asking us what it could be, or was.

 

Koch’s butterfly net is 5’10”, the artist’s height, and titled after the approximate number of species of butterflies in the world. The work relates the scale of one person, herself, and the vastness of biodiversity that is threatened by human action. The net is a symbol of human hubris–centuries of butterflies collected and killed for display, or, disrupted by environmental degradation. Koch relates to the beauty and desire of collection while recognizing the devastation. The drawing, “The Scent of Orange Blossoms”, includes a butterfly as pattern, ornament, symbol — incorporated into domestic spheres yet still maintaining ephemerality.

 

Margarette’s ceramic wall works evoke an understanding of nature and its fragile condition. The characters in her work disguise themselves as mechanical locks, tempting viewers to touch and manipulate them. Each articulated piece in the anatomy of Margarette’s haunted menagerie is handbuilt, in a pastel gothic palette of eshy peaches and earthen tones. Margarette’s work takes a holistic view of the natural world, where humans, animals, and the elements are ensnared inside of time. By examining symbols of strength, protection, sensuality, and captivity, her works articulate a dichotomy between the delicate and strong, the logical and fantastical, the open and closed.

 

Marks states that essences are energetic imprints of objects, plants, or environments made in water. Traditionally made by rolling dewdrops off of flower petals, they don’t contain measurable constituents of their imprint. In fact, they’re heavily diluted until a spirit dose is made that can be taken internally to affect our bodies on the most subtle level. A healing on behalf of (your name) will be an environmental essence of the gallery, collecting an imprint of the space, the people, the sounds, and senses that pass through for its entire duration. Upon closing the essence will be diluted, preserved, and bottled, creating a unique memory of the show that can be revisited as internal medicine. Essences are also replicated indefinitely by further dilution, so though the “mother” essence will be 1/1, there are an infinite number of possible copies, or stock bottles, akin to the model of reproducing prints in fine art.


Butterflies are a motif that occurs frequently with Moore’s work. Their classical symbolic properties — maturation, reincarnation, and transformation — inspire their repeated presence. A group of butterflies is called a kaleidoscope, the namesake of one of her works in the exhibition. Moore finds herself thinking about how butterflies are seen as symbolic, fantastical forms as well as representatives of the beauty of our natural world.

 

Shirley’s O.U.D. (Luna Moth) shows an apotropaic guardianship by copper IUD, literalizing art as spellwork. O.U.D. (Luna Moth), is informed by cycles and change and the archetype of transformation as a potentially protective force — whatever is lost in the “death” element inherent to all cycles is necessary for every rebirth. There is a sense of protection in that shedding and loss. Feel Free (Hawk Moth) examines feeding cycles. Moths eat oleanders, poisonous plants to humans and other animals. Poison for one life can be food to another. What an extreme spectrum, how often we experience this dichotomy in our lives. Shirley began this piece in the days after a brutal break up, one that shook her to her core. She looked for a way to remind herself that the dissolving stage of the chrysalis leads to a metamorphosis. The black pearls attached to the mosaic tether the idea that there’s a potential for a beautiful outcome through hardship. A pearl is formed after an initial invasive irritation to the oyster.


The butterflies socialize and float amongst each other to pollinate the living ecosystem of this show, opening on the longest, sunniest, most fertile day of the year.

— Leila Greiche

 

No butterflies, no nothing, Leila Greiche, New York, 2022
No butterflies, no nothing, Leila Greiche, New York, 2022
Jane Margarette, Baby B #3, 2022 Ceramics & glaze 22”H x 12”W x 2.5”D (55.88 x 30.48 x 6.35 cm)
Jane Margarette, Baby B #3, 2022 Ceramics & glaze 22”H x 12”W x 2.5”D (55.88 x 30.48 x 6.35 cm)
No butterflies, no nothing, Leila Greiche, New York, 2022
Mollie Conlee, Butterfly 3 (Psalm 23), 2016 Lenticular print on panel 12” x 12” In artist’s frame, 2022
Brigid Moore Kaleidoscope, 2021 Water soluble oil, watercolor and acrylic on canvas 35.5”H x 23.5”W
Mollie Conlee, Blue Butterfly (wheat), 2018, Lenticular print and plastic on panel 11” x 14” In artist’s frame, 2021
No butterflies, no nothing, Leila Greiche, New York, 2022
Leah Shirley O.U.D (luna moth) Glass, ceramic, acrylic, copper, silk, beeswax, grout, wood 24”W x 25”L x 1”D
Leah Shirley O.U.D (luna moth) Glass, ceramic, acrylic, copper, silk, beeswax, grout, wood 24”W x 25”L x 1”D
Leah Shirley O.U.D (luna moth) Glass, ceramic, acrylic, copper, silk, beeswax, grout, wood 24”W x 25”L x 1”D
Brigid Moore, Prey, 2021 Water soluble oil, watercolor, and acrylic on canvas 48”H x 33.75”W
Leah Shirley Feel Free (Hawk Moth), 2022 Glass, ceramic, mirror, grout, wood, freshwater pearls, silk 11” x 8” x 1”
Leah Shirley Feel Free (Hawk Moth), 2022 Glass, ceramic, mirror, grout, wood, freshwater pearls, silk 11” x 8” x 1”
No butterflies, no nothing, Leila Greiche, New York, 2022
Aidan Koch Approximately 5’10” / 17,500 Species, 2022 Wood, cotton netting, and brass 42” x 7.25” x 70”
Jade Forrest Marks, A healing on behalf of (your name), Paper, water, glass, fishing line, cardboard, glue, Variable dimensions (Essence will be bottled at the conclusion of the show)
Jade Forrest Marks, A healing on behalf of (your name), Paper, water, glass, fishing line, cardboard, glue, Variable dimensions (Essence will be bottled at the conclusion of the show)
No butterflies, no nothing, Leila Greiche, New York, 2022
Aidan Koch The Scent of Orange Blossoms, 2018 graphite, gouache, and soft pastel on paper 19” x 24” (unframed)
Brigid Moore Prey (small), 2021 Water soluble oil, watercolor, and acrylic on canvas 12”H x 18”W
Brigid Moore Metamorphosis, 2021 Watercolor, colored pencils, and oil pastels ~16”H x 20”W (frame)
No butterflies, no nothing, Leila Greiche, New York, 2022
Brigid Moore Aurora, 2022 50”H x 84”W Print on poly poplin fabric
Brigid Moore Solstice Flag, 2022 49”H x 31”W Print on poly poplin fabric
Brigid Moore Solstice Flag, 2022 49”H x 31”W Print on poly poplin fabric
Brigid Moore Fae Lantern, 2022 10.5” diameter Gouache on canvas & wooden frame

Previous Articles