The inheritance of stylized representation is the central focus of Amy Hill's Future Presidents (2022) at Fortnight Institute. The exhibition shows ten works in oil on canvas, ranging from about 2’x2’ to 3’x4’. The contemporary world is mediated through a glazed lens where distant cityscapes are flattened, and figures’ bulging features peer blankly toward the viewer, borrowing in part from the tradition of painted portraiture from both the European Renaissance and American Folk Art. By evoking art movements of seemingly bygone eras, the attitudes of the past linger in our contemporary era. For example, in Family Breakfast (2022) a father, mother and child are shown with heavy eyelids, pouring over a bounty of processed and branded food. This mode of portraiture has connotations with Christianity and the pastoral, here replaced with a secular, consumerist, urban bent. The baby’s gaze meets the viewers,’ as does at least one figure in almost every work in the show.
The subjects have an abundance to display— Sachs Fifth Avenue shopping bags, a pearl necklace, the luxury of a zoom call with a view, or a revolving door to a fancy apartment building. Western portraiture’s enduring obsession with displaying wealth continues here, without the import of religion, and Hill subverts the romanticization of earlier periods in art history by showing the vapidity of the white, wealthy subjects. Compressing time through styles of painting shows the continuing dissonance of the upper class from those of differing backgrounds, and asks if the future presidents will continue to be raised in privileged conditions of American expansion and wealth.
-Madeline
