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Artist
b. 1969 (U.S.A.)
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Title
Self-portrait in a Zig Zag Cardigan
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Year
2022
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Medium
Oil on panel
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Size
50 x 40 x 5 cm
19 5/8 x 15 3/4 x 2 inches
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Provenance
Lehmann Maupin, Chantal Joffe: Family Lexicon at Koo House (2022.08.24-12.11)


Chantal Joffe (b. 1969, St. Albans City, VT; lives and works in London) creates figurative paintings that address themes of portraiture, motherhood, the passage of time, and art’s relationship to history. Committed to the genre of figurative art, Joffe brings a combination of insight and integrity, as well as psychological and emotional force to her subjects. Almost always depicting women or girls, sometimes in groups, Joffe’s paintings loosely adhere to their source―be it a photograph, magazine page, or reflection in the mirror―reminding us that distortions of scale and form can often make a subject seem more lifelike. Joffe’s paintings alert us to how appearances are carefully constructed and codified, whether in a fashion magazine or the family album, and to the choreography of display. She offers insightful neutrality in her paintings and gives equal billing to catwalk models, porn actresses, mothers and children, loved ones, and literary heroines. Joffe’s choice of subject invites us to question our assumptions about what makes a noble portrait and challenges our expectations of what feminist art might be.
For Joffe, sensuality, self-disclosure, self-consciousness, and intimacy are brought together to heighten already complex narratives about human connection, perception, and representation. These narratives, implicit in the relationship between any artist and subject, are extended to the viewer as propositions and provocations. Whether in paintings a few inches square or ten feet high, Joffe's deceptively casual brushstrokes and ability to combine gesture with a pragmatic approach to representation simultaneously seduces and disarms. Often laying bare the physicality of their making and suffused with a palpable empathetic warmth, Joffe’s paintings offer an insightful examination into ever-shifting human connections and the endless intricacies of looking.
Source: Lehmann Maupin artist page


Chantal Joffe (b. 1969, St. Albans City, VT; lives and works in London) creates figurative paintings that address themes of portraiture, motherhood, the passage of time, and art’s relationship to history. Committed to the genre of figurative art, Joffe brings a combination of insight and integrity, as well as psychological and emotional force to her subjects. Almost always depicting women or girls, sometimes in groups, Joffe’s paintings loosely adhere to their source―be it a photograph, magazine page, or reflection in the mirror―reminding us that distortions of scale and form can often make a subject seem more lifelike. Joffe’s paintings alert us to how appearances are carefully constructed and codified, whether in a fashion magazine or the family album, and to the choreography of display. She offers insightful neutrality in her paintings and gives equal billing to catwalk models, porn actresses, mothers and children, loved ones, and literary heroines. Joffe’s choice of subject invites us to question our assumptions about what makes a noble portrait and challenges our expectations of what feminist art might be.
For Joffe, sensuality, self-disclosure, self-consciousness, and intimacy are brought together to heighten already complex narratives about human connection, perception, and representation. These narratives, implicit in the relationship between any artist and subject, are extended to the viewer as propositions and provocations. Whether in paintings a few inches square or ten feet high, Joffe's deceptively casual brushstrokes and ability to combine gesture with a pragmatic approach to representation simultaneously seduces and disarms. Often laying bare the physicality of their making and suffused with a palpable empathetic warmth, Joffe’s paintings offer an insightful examination into ever-shifting human connections and the endless intricacies of looking.
Source: Lehmann Maupin artist page