Charlotte Mullins comments on Hand Inside
ELLIE MACGARRY’S spare and delicate watercolours seem particularly fitting in a world that has had to curb its collective sociability for two years. Her recent series ‘Hand Inside’ investigates the power of touch at a time when hugging others and feeling skin on skin has been near impossible. In her paintings, people touch and explore themselves and their clothes, pushing fingers between buttons and over shoulders.
In this example, one hand moves upwards across the chest as another stretches down into a translucent pocket. The thumbs reach towards each other, a moment of togetherness held in check by the small diamond of flesh that peeps from between the shirt’s buttons. ‘Each time I paint a garment on a body,’ she says, ‘I see it a bit like a pair of curtains, at varying states of open and closed, revealing a glimpse of something behind.’
In Miss Macgarry’s paintings, there is an economy of means that is intentional. The bodies are genderless and anonymous and she cites the early-20th-century photography of Claude Cahun as an influence. Despite their spareness, her paintings are psychological explorations of where identity lies and what it is to inhabit a body. She also draws inspiration from music, film and clothing.
Before becoming an artist, Miss Macgarry wanted to work in fashion and a love of pattern and the qualities of fabric still pervades her work. The hands in this painting are stylised and simplified, but the sheer shirt is a vivid malachite green cut through with inky blue spots.