Green Seeks Little Attention (2021) is a solo exhibition by David Egan for
Haydens, which presents new paintings alongside existing works from the past four years. The exhibition is punctuated by a series of short texts by the artist and writer Aodhan Madden. Central to the exhibition is a reconfigured version of
Crying Room (2019), a recent installation which approximates a church's crying room—the segregated viewing chamber which quarantines leaky parishioners (crying children, mourners, overwhelmed believers), whilst still allowing for remote participation in church ritual. For the presentation at Haydens, the walls of
Crying Room are shuffled apart, made to be open-plan—an impotent room. This sense of things losing their edges—breaking down into pieces, becoming fragmented—permeates the exhibition. Burrowing weeds open cracks in foundations, bodies are exploded into chains of cells, colours mystically flicker and blend.
Each painting in the exhibition is a painting of a flower in some way. A flower might signify just about anything at all besides a flower. The language of flowers: coded colours, wilting innuendo. One flower cowers on a bench. It's being told off, or it feels guilty about something. It clears its throat, but it can't speak, it's a flower. It just sits on the bench feeling sorry for itself, embarrassed by all the innuendo and the garish colours. Bunches of colour are everywhere. Red sweeps the floor, the walls are yellowing, the flowers feel blue, and green is evasive. Some flowers are like cabbage ears, unfurling to hear the florist gossip. Some flowers purport to be angels pedalling passage between the worlds. Some flowers are thirsty, and others are cagey. Green seeks little attention. A little, maybe.
Review by Amy May Stuart for MEMO
Photos: 2021, 2018 Christo Crocker; 2019 Christian Capurro