M+B presents Aubrey Levinthal’s Tourist, an escapade into the accumulated mundane which breeds an entire life. Levinthal’s paintings take the strangeness of every-day encounters as their muse, cataloging the soft melancholy of a life in transit with a diaristic sense of levity.
At once both insider and outsider, Levinthal’s figures arrest the slippery interplay between the lonely voyeurism of the tourist and the studied absurdity of feeling like a stranger in one’s own home, collapsing any strict distinction between the two and exposing the mutable oddity of being at once both perceived and perceptive of others in public space.
In an almost paradoxical fashion, Levinthal employs restraint as a tool for arresting rich complexity. She deliberately whittles away at charged dynamism and linear storytelling until only the formal structure of the scene itself remains, forcing the space of each painting to turn in on itself with a sense of contemplative surprise. In the absence of heavy-handed action or emotion, the viewer is left to sit with the charming discomfort of a pure exchange of outward gazes, passing back and forth between both Levinthal’s figures and the viewer themself in a quietly kaleidoscopic ricochet of glances.
Tourist is on view through October 7 @ M+B, 612 N Almont Drive, Los Angeles