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The title deliberately echoes Otto Müller’s earlier Three Girls in a Wood, but American artist Kehinde Wiley transforms that art reference with contemporary women fully clothed in garments that read as self-chosen, poised between intimacy and autonomy.

Three Black women sit together on a vivid red background before a dense, decorative field of pink floral patterning. The left woman sits cross-legged, her arms folded around one knee, wearing a dark short-sleeved top, patterned leggings, sandals, a watch, and a choker. Her face turns slightly to the side with a calm, guarded expression. At center, a woman in a coral-pink shirt and hoop earrings sits with her back mostly toward us, twisting her torso so her profile appears in sharp relief. One hand braces behind her while the other arm rests loosely on a bent knee. At right, a woman in a pale lavender T-shirt and blue star-patterned pants sits with her legs folded close, turning her head outward to meet us with a direct, serious gaze. Wiley paints their skin with luminous care and individualized attention, while curling green vines and small blossoms seem to spill across their bodies, partially overlaying clothing, arms, and legs. The setting is not a naturalistic forest but a flattened, theatrical surface of ornament, beauty, and visual tension.

This work emerged from Wiley’s practice of inviting local residents into compositions historically reserved for people granted prestige, permanence, and power. The floral wallpaper-like field replaces the “wood” with a stylized environment that feels both seductive and encroaching, as if history, design, and representation are pressing in. In 2018, Wiley was extending his well-known revisions of European portrait traditions into more sustained depictions of women, asking who gets to occupy monumentality, beauty, and museum space. The result is both homage and correction: 3 women presented not as allegorical types, but as individuals with complexity, agency, and quiet force.

The title deliberately echoes Otto Müller’s earlier Three Girls in a Wood, but American artist Kehinde Wiley transforms that art reference with contemporary women fully clothed in garments that read as self-chosen, poised between intimacy and autonomy. Three Black women sit together on a vivid red background before a dense, decorative field of pink floral patterning. The left woman sits cross-legged, her arms folded around one knee, wearing a dark short-sleeved top, patterned leggings, sandals, a watch, and a choker. Her face turns slightly to the side with a calm, guarded expression. At center, a woman in a coral-pink shirt and hoop earrings sits with her back mostly toward us, twisting her torso so her profile appears in sharp relief. One hand braces behind her while the other arm rests loosely on a bent knee. At right, a woman in a pale lavender T-shirt and blue star-patterned pants sits with her legs folded close, turning her head outward to meet us with a direct, serious gaze. Wiley paints their skin with luminous care and individualized attention, while curling green vines and small blossoms seem to spill across their bodies, partially overlaying clothing, arms, and legs. The setting is not a naturalistic forest but a flattened, theatrical surface of ornament, beauty, and visual tension. This work emerged from Wiley’s practice of inviting local residents into compositions historically reserved for people granted prestige, permanence, and power. The floral wallpaper-like field replaces the “wood” with a stylized environment that feels both seductive and encroaching, as if history, design, and representation are pressing in. In 2018, Wiley was extending his well-known revisions of European portrait traditions into more sustained depictions of women, asking who gets to occupy monumentality, beauty, and museum space. The result is both homage and correction: 3 women presented not as allegorical types, but as individuals with complexity, agency, and quiet force.

“Three Girls in a Wood” by Kehinde Wiley (American) - Oil on linen / 2018 - Joslyn Art Museum (Omaha, Nebraska) #WomenInArt #KehindeWiley #Wiley #JoslynArtMuseum #BlackArt #ContemporaryArt #TheJoslyn #BlackArtist #AfricanAmericanArt #art #artText #2010sArt #BlueskyArt #AmericanArt #AmericanArtist

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An irregular 12-sided canvas holds a dreamlike scene against a smoky rose, mauve, and umber sky. Three Black women emerge from darkness and from folds of silver-gray drapery that gather heavily across the lower edge. At left, one woman faces forward with a steady gaze. The top of her head opens into a glowing, brain, edged by pale light. At right, a second figure turns in profile, chin lifted, eyes looking off to the side. Between them, a third rests lower, head tilted and half-reclining. Around and above them, disembodied hands descend or hover, some open, some curled, some gently offering. Sprays of vivid yellow flowers thread through the composition like sparks or veins, crossing bodies, hands, and cloth. Fine gold contour lines trace shoulders, arms, and fingers, making parts of the figures seem to appear and disappear at once.

The title “Catalyst” suggests activation like a force that sets change into motion without fully containing it. American artist Maryam Adib’s larger practice centers memory, dreams, lineage, and the natural world. This painting feels like as an image of psychic, ancestral, and communal awakening. The opened head, hovering hands, and branching flowers imply thought becoming growth, memory becoming action, and care becoming transformation. Rather than isolating the figures, the composition binds them through touch, atmosphere, and shared symbolic space. 

Made when Adib was a young artist before completing her BFA in 2020, the work already shows themes that would define her later practice: magical-realist figuration, layered consciousness, and histories felt in the body. In Cornell’s Here & Now: Artists of Central New York, the painting also resonates with the exhibition’s focus on the body as a site where identity, place, and lived experience converge.

An irregular 12-sided canvas holds a dreamlike scene against a smoky rose, mauve, and umber sky. Three Black women emerge from darkness and from folds of silver-gray drapery that gather heavily across the lower edge. At left, one woman faces forward with a steady gaze. The top of her head opens into a glowing, brain, edged by pale light. At right, a second figure turns in profile, chin lifted, eyes looking off to the side. Between them, a third rests lower, head tilted and half-reclining. Around and above them, disembodied hands descend or hover, some open, some curled, some gently offering. Sprays of vivid yellow flowers thread through the composition like sparks or veins, crossing bodies, hands, and cloth. Fine gold contour lines trace shoulders, arms, and fingers, making parts of the figures seem to appear and disappear at once. The title “Catalyst” suggests activation like a force that sets change into motion without fully containing it. American artist Maryam Adib’s larger practice centers memory, dreams, lineage, and the natural world. This painting feels like as an image of psychic, ancestral, and communal awakening. The opened head, hovering hands, and branching flowers imply thought becoming growth, memory becoming action, and care becoming transformation. Rather than isolating the figures, the composition binds them through touch, atmosphere, and shared symbolic space. Made when Adib was a young artist before completing her BFA in 2020, the work already shows themes that would define her later practice: magical-realist figuration, layered consciousness, and histories felt in the body. In Cornell’s Here & Now: Artists of Central New York, the painting also resonates with the exhibition’s focus on the body as a site where identity, place, and lived experience converge.

“Catalyst” by Maryam Adib (American) - Oil & acrylic on canvas / 2019 - Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art (Ithaca, New York) #WomenInArt #WomensArt #WomanArtist #WomenArtists #MaryamAdib #Adib #JohnsonMuseum #JohnsonMuseumOfArt #Cornell #art #artText #artwork #2010sArt #AmericanArtist #AmericanArt

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💙❤️Good Girl, Bad Girl What's it gonna be!?💙❤️

#goodgirlbadgirl #ggbg #AntiProship #ProshippersDNI #art #digitalart #ibispaintx #ibispaintxart #madeinibispaintx #y2k #2010s #y2kcore #y2kart #2010score #2010sart #y2kartwork #2010sartwork

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💗Happy International Pink Day Everyone!!!💗
#ApeEscape #monkeypink #FijitFriends #AntiProship #ProshippersDNI #PinkDay #internationalpinkday #ibispaintx #madeinibispaintx #IbisPaintxart #FijitFriendsSerafina #ApeEscapeMonkeyPink #Y2k #2000sart #y2kart #2010s #2010sart #happyinternationalpinkday

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