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Robin F. Williams: Undying - Perrotin - Exhibitions - PPOW

Robin F. Williams, Blacula, 2023. Oil on canvas, 127 x 177.8 cm | 50 x 70 inch. Photo by JSP Art Photography. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

Robin F. Williams: Undying comprises a selection of new paintings and drawings that explore the psychological dimensions of intimacy across multiple film genres. Some scenes capture moments of leering tenderness. Others, the afterglow of an unholy encounter. Each explores the dynamics of coercion, transgression, and submission that shape obsessive relationships while embracing the ambiguity of sexual agency therein. Undying is her first exhibition with the gallery. Her solo exhibition, Robin F. Williams: We’ve Been Expecting You, is currently on view at the Columbus Museum of Art through August 18.

Undying extends Williams’s enduring engagement with the representation of women and the construction of gender in portraiture, advertising, folklore, social media, and film. Her vivid imagery is as diverse as her source material. Known for highly stylized figures composed through layers of brushwork, marbling, airbrushing, sponging, and stenciling, Williams often employs an arsenal of tools more familiar to crafting than to easel painting. These techniques anchor the lush opticality of her images in haptic relatability, humbling the gravitas of oil painting while creating richly textured surfaces that reward careful looking.

Williams herself is a close observer. While creating Undying, she recalled looking for “the painting” in films, searching for shots where story and composition crystallized into an emotional punch. The resulting paintings, based on film stills, offer themselves up as a type of fan fiction that attenuates what is otherwise a fleeting erotic exchange. The Man Who Fell to Earth (2023), Persona (2023), Blue Velvet (2023), and Thirst (2023) offer a study in cinematic convention: all feature women on their backs under hulking partners, captured from the intrusive vantage point of an over-the-shoulder shot. Blacula (2023) and Videodrome (2023) study a slightly different trope, staging women who luxuriate under the influence of sinister forces beyond the frame. They may later meet their demise, but here, they are the only girl in the world.

The ambiguity of gendered pleasure and its mediation on film formed the central topic of early feminist theory. Indeed, the heyday of b-movie slashers in the 1970s was accompanied by a wave of canonical texts including Laura Mulvey’s treatise on visual pleasure and narrative cinema. The essay posited that film was a visual language developed by men for men, whose very structure preclude the possibility of female agency. Scholars since have insisted on greater complexity. Carol J. Clover’s concept of the “final girl” and Linda Williams theory of excessive emotion as cathartic cinematic experience offer models of identification for audiences of any gender to enjoy horror films as embodied subjects. And yet the idea of enjoyment sits uneasily with horror. Our pleasure as viewers is often proportional to the misery that unfolds on screen. For example, the “final girl” is always tortured and miraculously survives, only to be condemned to return, again and again, in sequel after sequel, to face down the killer once more. What do we extract from these female protagonists? Film theorist Linda Williams suggests that extreme violence, sex, and emotion are hallmarks of the genre, whose excesses audiences consume like the vampires they watch on screen. Taken together, the works in Undying deliver a closely cropped meditation on the dynamics of the vampiric in both filmic subject and spectator alike.

Robin F. Williams: Undying - Perrotin - Exhibitions - PPOW

Robin F. Williams, Thirst, 2023. Oil on canvas, 127 x 152.4 cm | 50 x 60 inch. Photo by JSP Art Photography. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

As with vampires and their victims, in Williams’s paintings, opposites attract. The artist plays secondary and tertiary colors off one another to undergird the pictures with maximum tension. Vermillion and teal vibrate across the canvass in The Man Who Fell to Earth, Videodrome, and Thirst. Red and green clash in Persona. Grafting the laws of attraction onto the dogma of the color wheel, Williams plays at the edge of representation: complimentary colors provide maximum contrast when paired together but result in gray obliteration when fully combined. Photorealistic as they may appear, these paintings in fact hover at the edge of legibility. One brush stroke out of place, and the integrity of the whole would collapse.

Williams locates the fine line between the erotic flirtation of colors versus the gray oblivion of their total imbrication; between the only girl and the “final girl”; and between the romance of an undying love versus the horror of the undead. Despite the ambiguity of the paintings, Williams wryly points out that their source films “are all tragedies, in the end.” The works in Undying walk the tightrope between self-determination and selfdestruction, snaring both fictional subjects and real-time viewers in the frisson of a suspended moment where—as in good fan fiction—another ending is always possible.

-Katherine Rochester, PhD

Born 1984 in Ohio, USA
Lives and works in Brooklyn, USA

Known for her large-scale paintings of stylized, sentient, yet ambiguously generated female figures, Robin F. Williams (b. 1984) employs a variety of techniques, including oil, airbrush, poured paint, marbling, and staining of raw canvas to create deeply textured and complexly constructed paintings. Combining a masterful technical understanding with an innate sense of curiosity, Williams fuses practices from social media channels such as Instagram, TikTok, and YouTube with references to early modernism, pop culture, advertising, and cinema, to challenge the systemic conventions around representations of women. Williams received her BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design.

Installation Views

Installation Views Thumbnails
View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Osamu Sakamoto. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Osamu Sakamoto. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

 

 

 

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

 

 

 

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Osamu Sakamoto. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Osamu Sakamoto. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

 

 

 

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

 

 

 

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.

View of the exhibition "Undying" at Perrotin Tokyo. Photo by Yuta Saito. Courtesy of the artist, P·P·O·W, and Perrotin.