Recent Drawings > Works on semitransparent film, 2020 to present

The Tides Within
Oil on semitransparent Dura-Lar Film
82" x 216"
2024
Give and Take
Oil on semitransparent Dura-Lar Film
16" x 20"
2023
A Window Long Since Removed
Oil on semitransparent Dura-Lar film
40" x 60"
2023
Five Years Adrift
Oil on semitransparent Dura-Lar Film
40" x 44"
2023
From This Day Forward (90")
Oil on semi-transparent Dura-Lar Film
90" x 63"
2022
The Infinite Pull
Oil on layered semi-transparent Dura-Lar film
84" x 220"
2023
Support that Remains at 94"
Oil on gessoed paper and semi-transparent Dura-Lar Film
94" x 120"
2023
Holding Out, Holding In
Oil on layered Dura-lar film, layered paper
26" x 75"
2023
Installation View #1, Part of series Pushing back the Sea
Oil on layered Dura Lar Film
80" x 57"
2020
Installation View #2, Part of series Pushing Back the Sea
Oil on layered Dura Lar film
73" x 80"
2021
Morning Prayer
Oil on layered Dura Lar
90" x 66"
2021
Evening Prayer
Oil on layered Dura Lar Film
72" x 102"
2021
Interior/Exterior #1
Oil on Dura-Lar film
39" x 32"
2023
Interior/Exterior #2
Oil on Dura-Lar Film
39" x 32"
2023
Interior/Exterior #3
Oil on Dura-Lar Film
39" x 32"
2023
Interior/Exterior #4
Oil on Dura-Lar Film
39" x 32"
2023
Interior/Exterior #5
Oil on Dura-Lar Film
39" x 32"
2023

Mary Porterfield, by Lori Waxman
60wrd/min COVID Edition
art.newcity.com, April 23, 2021.

An artist’s day job can deeply inform what they make during studio time. Evidence lies in the creative output of those, famous and otherwise, who paid their rent as accountants, chemists, graphic designers, window dressers, arts administrators and kindergarten teachers. Mary Porterfield is an occupational therapist and talented portraitist, deeply committed to rendering her elderly, infirm subjects with equal parts respect and clarity. Her medium, sepia-toned oils on translucent sheets, allows for blurring, shifting and accumulation, and it seems especially fitting for her most ambitious work yet, a series of life-size, cut-out depictions of her father, who has Parkinsonism, and her mother, who is his sole caretaker, a situation made only harder by the pandemic. On display in Figures/Faces, a group exhibition at the Evanston Art Center, “Pushing Back the Sea” functions like a narrative frieze, tracking the increasing degeneration of Porterfield’s father’s body and the correspondingly heavier load her mother bears. By the end of the cycle, her elegant, strong mother is nearly underwater, a metaphor so apt it figured in a nightmare I had years ago about my own grandmother when she was the caretaker for my grandfather, who had dementia. Nana would have recognized herself and Papa here, in these two figures of Porterfield’s, and she would have felt seen.

—Lori Waxman 2021-04-14 11:11 AM
photo credit: Tom VanEynde