
Erin M. Riley
Reflections 2, 2019
wool, cotton
46 x 48 ins.
116.8 x 121.9 cm
Longtermhandstand is proud to present the duo exhibition of Brooklyn-based artist Erin M. Riley and Hungarian painter Mónika Kárándi. This showcase highlights the striking contrast between two distinct artistic approaches, not only in their chosen mediums—Riley’s handwoven tapestries and Kárándi’s contemporary painted landscapes—but also in their exploration of the individual versus the collective. Erin M. Riley’s meticulously crafted, large-scale woven works unravel the intimate, erotic, and psychologically raw terrain of personal history, relationships, trauma, and resilience. Using a collage-like process, she weaves together moments from personal archives, internet imagery, and media clippings to construct deeply personal yet universally resonant narratives. Her work lays bare the complexities of the female experience, exposing how trauma etches itself into the psyche and body. Each tapestry acts as a vessel of memory, inviting viewers into a space of vulnerability and self-examination. Mónika Kárándi, in contrast, expands the notion of identity through collective transformation. Her painted landscapes explore the body’s extension beyond its physical boundaries, merging it with the natural world. Inspired by the ancient desert plant Welwitschia Mirabilis—an organism that has endured for millennia—her figures stretch, tangle, and intertwine like tendrils reaching for both sky and earth. These hair-like, morphing forms embody endurance, resilience, and the longing for connection. Kárándi’s work blurs the line between human and plant life, suggesting a profound interdependence between individual existence and the greater forces of nature. As she describes, “Even if I did separate them, they would again and again long to merge with each other.” Through Riley’s deeply introspective, singular narratives and Kárándi’s expansive, interconnected visions, "Deep Inside in the Safest Place" invites us to consider the interplay between isolation and unity, fragmentation and continuity, trauma and survival. In this dynamic juxtaposition, the exhibition offers a meditation on endurance—both personal and collective—and the fluid boundaries that shape our identities over time.
Erin M. Riley (b. 1985) crafts meticulous, large-scale tapestries depicting intimate, erotic, and psychologically raw imagery that reflects upon relationships, memories, fantasies, sexual violence, and trauma. Collaging personal photographs, images sourced from the internet, newspaper clippings, and other ephemera to create her compositions, the Brooklyn-based weaver exposes the range of women’s lived experiences and how trauma weighs on the search for self-identity. In her review of Riley’s most recent solo exhibition with P·P·O·W, The Consensual Reality of Healing Fantasies, Roberta Smith of the New York Times wrote, “Her richly variegated colors and complex, arresting scenes take full advantage of tapestry’s stitch-by-stitch autonomy.” Riley received her BFA from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design and an MFA from the Tyler School of Art. Her work has been included in solo and group exhibitions at P·P·O·W, New York, NY; Hashimoto Contemporary, San Francisco, CA; Kohn Gallery, Los Angeles, CA; Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Høvikodden, Norway; The Frances Young Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery at Skidmore College, Saratoga Springs, NY; Gana Art Gallery, Seoul, South Korea; kaufmann repetto, New York, NY, and Milan, Italy; Timothy Taylor, London, UK; and the Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY; among others. Riley is the recipient of a United States Artists Fellowship Grant, 2021, and an American Academy of Arts & Letters Art Purchase Prize, 2021, and has completed residencies at MacDowell Colony, NH, and the Museum of Art and Design, NY. Her work was recently featured in 52 Artists: A Feminist Milestone, Aldrich Contemporary Art Museum, Ridgefield, CT; manifesto of fragility, the 16th Lyon Biennale of Contemporary Art, Lyon, France; and Kingdom of the Ill, Museion, Bolzano, Italy.