Lindsay, as I Remember Her
By Lavely Miller
Acrylic on paper on panel, 2020
40 x 30 in.
$5,000
Available through the Muskegon Museum of Art
Lavely Miller paints portraits that narrate the effects of trauma, exploring visual cues that speak to loss, suffering, recovery, and salvation. Physically still, her figures exist in moments of emotional action, their frequently direct gazes challenging the viewer’s attention. This sense of movement is translated through transparent layers of glazes, sometimes upward of 100 separate applications of color combining to create the final surface. The quality of layering is heightened by the use of paper, as it moves and crinkles during its application to create physical depth. Classical Flemish glazing techniques — unusually applied almost exclusively with the artist’s right index finger — and the aged appearance of the painted surface give these figures a timeless quality, a frozen moment of physical time filled with universal human emotion.
A practicing artist with a BFA in painting and drawing from James Madison University, Miller also holds an Ed.D. and M.Ed. in clinical mental health. She exhibits throughout the Washington, D.C. and Virginia area in addition group and juried shows across the U.S. Her paintings can be found in the collections of the University of Virginia, the New Salem Museum, the National Center for Transgender Equality in Washington, D.C., and the Twenty-First Century Fox and News Corporation Building in New York City, amongst other public and private collections. Her work recently received a top prize award at Art Basel (2013) and a judge’s choice award from Camy Clough, Director of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History (2020). Miller is represented by Arcadia Contemporary in Los Angeles, California and Artist’s Proof in Washington, D.C.
Three portraits by Miller, including Lindsay, as I Remember Her, will be featured in the upcoming traveling exhibition “Rising Voices 2: The Bennett Prize for Women Figurative Realist Painters” premiering at the Muskegon Museum of Art from May 28 to September 5, 2021. Inquiries about the paintings can be directed to the Muskegon Museum of Art.
You can learn more about the artist at her website at www.lavelymillerkershman.com and follow her on Instagram at lavelymiller.