Mel Cook and Kailyn Perry


Dream On

Mar 5 - 26, 2021

Dream On features two painters whose bodies of work simultaneously focus on the foreboding sense of anxiety that accompanies being a woman. Both Mel Cook and Kailyn Perry use a saturated palette that often feels femme, bright and colorful—a marker of naïveté and otherness. The paintings use beautiful and seductive imagery that the viewer often becomes lost in before they realize that they are in the presence of something darker. Navigating the boundaries between illusion and truth, hysteria and trauma, Cook and Perry’s work excavates a range of everyday experiences. The paintings draw connections between architecture, bodies, language, through gestural marks that articulates and questions moments of systemic silence and violence. Together, “Dream On” is asking us to dream while also critiquing the ability to escape.

Perry makes work varying from nostalgia to paranoia while exploring the storytelling elements of painting. She is interested in using empty cityscapes, dramatic angles, and proportions that make the audience feel like a voyeur to other’s experiences.The paintings depict everyday life of a woman’s body inside a city and universe that was designed for men. Famous Chicago architecture is contrasted with the artist's inner thoughts and feelings. At first, these emotions seem to be the most absurd elements of the narrative, however Perry aims to confront the viewer with another absurdity: the violent constraints of everyday architecture and how it is used to silence those who are less privileged.

Visually, Cook is influenced by children’s illustrations, storybooks, and cartoons. Her imagery comes from this source material that often serves as visual pedagogical tools where toxic ideas of femme identities and otherness are often depicted and addressed for the first time in childhood. Her paintings explore the relationship between language and femme bodies being pushed up against systems of (re)production. Cook’s work charts the ever expanding constellation of misogyny focusing on topics such as reproductive justice, state sanctioned violence, and looking back at the historical markers that have led us to this place in time. The paintings feel tender, yet facetious while playfully pushing the viewer into familiar and uncomfortable moments of psychic turmoil.

Mel Cook Website

Kailyn Perry Website