"Come Again" by Soren Hope presents a dynamic canvas filled with swirling oranges, reds, and muted blues, where abstract forms hint at faces and limbs through a fluid composition. Elements appear to emerge and dissolve, embodying the tension between figuration and abstraction. The painterly technique employs pooling and eroded marks, creating textures that defy seamless illusion. Hope's work explores the boundaries of recognition and embodiment, capturing a moment where form and meaning are perpetually in flux. ...
Soren Hope’s work explores the unstable boundary between figuration and abstraction. Through painting and printmaking, they use substitutions and mirrored forms - an arm standing in for another, a face completing itself through reflection - to probe the limits of recognition and embodiment. Material gestures like pooling paint and eroded marks resist seamless illusion, creating images that hover between coherence and collapse. Across media, Hope’s practice sustains this tension, holding viewers in the space where meaning flickers and form comes undone. ...
New York Life Gallery centers collaborative curations with artists across all mediums. The gallery exhibits emerging and mid-career artists as well as unknown archives and 20th-century artworks. As an artist-run space, the gallery focuses on programming that is community-oriented.