Ruby Sky Stiler — Cat Sitter (acrylic paint, acrylic resin, paper, glue, and graphite, on panel, 2022)

seen from Germany
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seen from United States
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seen from United States
Ruby Sky Stiler — Cat Sitter (acrylic paint, acrylic resin, paper, glue, and graphite, on panel, 2022)
Ruby Sky Stiler
Ruby Sky Stiler at Alexander Gray Associates NY
“Group Relief”— a solo exhibition by artist Ruby Sky Stiler
Featuring new relief paintings and figurative furniture-sculpture by New York artist Ruby Sky Stiler (b. 1979), Group Relief is presented by the Fairfield University Art Museum as part of the University’s celebration of 50 years of women at Fairfield. Stiler, who holds a BFA from RISD and an MFA from the Yale University School of Art, has been investigating images of women inspired by the techniques and language of classical antiquity for over a decade. Recently, Stiler’s art has expanded to include the subject of “father and child.” The dearth of art historical precedent for depictions of men displaying emotional intimacy, or being defined by their relationship to their children, is in stark contrast to the abundant impressions of “mother and child.”
Curated by Ian Berry, Dayton Director of the Tang Teaching Museum, this exhibition includes contemporary interpretations of the traditional museum “viewing bench” as a form of utilitarian sculpture. The exhibition invites viewers to sit and consider their own bodies in relation to the gallery space and the ideas in the artwork on the walls.
The exhibition is accessible through the museum’s website as a 3-D virtual exhibition with audio tour. (Due to Covid-19 precautions, Fairfield University’s in-person viewing of the exhibition in the museum’s Walsh Gallery in the Quick Center for the Arts, is not available.)
The exhibition, which opened with a virtual conversation between Ruby Sky Stiler and curator Ian Berry on September 10, will be on view until December 19.
by ruby sky stiler
Ruby Sky Stiler
Pink Figures from Pulled in Brooklyn
2019
Ruby Sky Stiler
Ruby Sky Stiler at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery
If Ruby Sky Stiler’s latest sculptures at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery seem less curvy than usual, it’s because her latest work departs from the powerful, sometimes monumental female figures she’s known for, zeroing in on dads and kids instead. The subject of men with their children is so rare in contemporary art that it’s initially hard to grasp that the bigger figures aren’t women. Odder still is each group’s repose - wouldn’t these kids be playing soccer with dad or at least a card game? Stiler shatters stereotypical gender roles with aplomb. (On view on the Lower East Side through Oct 7th.) Ruby Sky Stiler, installation view of ‘Fathers’ at Nicelle Beauchene Gallery, September 2018.