Heidi Hahn, NOT YOUR WOMAN

April 25 – June 11, 2025
Gallery 1 & 2

Michael Kohn Gallery is pleased to present NOT YOUR WOMAN, the third solo exhibition by Brooklyn-based artist Heidi Hahn, opening April 25.  Comprised of eight large-scale paintings and fifteen smaller works, the exhibition unfolds in two distinct yet interconnected experiences—one driven by scale, the other by genre as a point of rupture. Hahn’s paintings hover between image and material, allowing the physicality of paint to dictate form, meaning, and perception. Rather than adhering to figuration, her work uses abstraction to reshape narrative, destabilizing conventional readings of the body. Paint itself becomes an active force, shifting the boundaries of representation and revealing a more elusive reality.

Following the trajectory of her previous series—Soft Joy, Thoughts That Break the Soul, and Flex, Rot, and Spi(l)t—this new body of work introduces a renewed dialogue between scale and expression. The larger paintings remain open-ended and experimental, posing questions about presence, perception, and form. The smaller works, by contrast, engage with genre—landscape, the pastoral—subverting tradition to offer an alternative narrative. If the larger paintings pose the question, the smaller works attempt, or complicate, a response.

Hahn’s compositions—characterized by exaggerated forms, expansive color fields, and gestural layers—foreground the tension between surface and depth, material and meaning. Figures are fractured, displaced, and abstracted, not to erase them but to strip away expectations. “I think the paintings are protective of the body,” Hahn notes, “I always angle [subjects] to distort or turn out the meaning of a feminine body. These paintings are not interested in figuration, or representation, but in dealing with the nature of abstraction as a means to find a different narration.” This approach allows her work to exist in a space where meaning remains fluid, shifting between what is seen, what is felt, and what resists being fully known.

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Heidi Hahn, Soft Joy

February 19 - April 16, 2022
Gallery 1 & 2

Kohn Gallery is thrilled to announce Soft Joy, Heidi Hahn’s second solo presentation with the gallery. Known for her lushly evocative compositions of melancholic figures, Hahn wholly prioritizes the female experience. This new body of work, comprised of large-scale paintings, examines bodily autonomy through the creation of personal space in the context of paint, ownership over imagery and materiality, and the representation of privacy in the midst of vulnerability.

Hahn writes, “I paint my own experiences, which happens to come from a female perspective. I think these paintings try to contend with the way women have usually been represented, which is through an erotic lens even while masquerading as liberation and freedom. I don’t feel free from the violence imposed on my body. I don’t feel free displaying the erotic of my body for the pleasure of others.” 

Hahn’s work suspends objectification, either self-imposed or assumed by the viewer, and embarks on a meditation of form that protects the agency of her own body. The compositions are constructions of space and shape that corporealize persona with emotive grandeur guided by the temperament of paint’s qualities. Her gestures explore the relationship between materiality and surface which meet to assert power– one that is usually reserved for the viewer. These women are not offering an invitation to be viewed, but rather exist in their own agency and as conduits of her question, “How does the drawing of a body delegate itself to being a seen and known form?”

Reminiscent of the sinuous lines of Edvard Munch, the soak-stained expressionism of Helen Frankenthaler, and the raw symbolism of late-Guston, Hahn establishes a truly distinctive voice of today–aware of what came before, but also untethered to it. 

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Heidi Hahn, Burn Out in Shredded Heaven

April 6 - May 23, 2019
Gallery 1

Kohn Gallery is very pleased to announce its first solo exhibition by New York-based artist and painter Heidi Hahn, opening on April 6 and on view through May 23, 2019. Born and raised in Los Angeles, Hahn creates introspective paintings that engage with the female body. Her sumptuously atmospheric and layered application of paint, in conversation with art-historical traditions, draw the viewer into a psychological space that evokes our attachment to the female form and how that is processed through both traditional and contemporary readings of the male gaze. Hahn incites the sinuous lines of Edvard Munch, the soak-stained expressionism of Helen Frankenthaler, and the raw symbolism of late-Guston, all the while establishing a truly distinctive voice of today–aware of what came before, but also untethered to it. Gestural, fluid, and frequently spectral, Hahn’s works reframe and re-contextualize her subjects, exploring the ambiguous and shifting boundaries between public and private selves.

Heidi Hahn’s work presented in Burn Out in Shredded Heaven, as noted by curator Diana Nawi, splits the difference between the imagistic and evocative qualities of painting, between its ability to construct narrative and its desire to evade language altogether. Her images relay iconically depicted female figures set against loosely rendered backgrounds that can suggest a real location—a city street, a subway, a bathroom, a bedroom—or give only a hint of site within what is an otherwise largely abstract surface. This ambiguous treatment of ground evidences the artist’s refusal of specificity, her purposeful confusion of temporalities, bodies, and of interior and exterior as place and metaphor. The women pictured, elongated and somewhat lumpy—their barely insinuated faces hard to read beneath their heavy hair—suggest not so much particular people as symbolic figures who have conjured their own settings, which in turn seem to be mental states as much as places, alienated, melancholy, intimate, and fleeting. Hahn’s figures reference women in her life, including her friends, mother, and sister, but they become archetypal and often amusingly cartoonish in her hands, their import derived largely from the distinct affective resonance of the painting. The artist deploys a range of visuality—canvases can be minimal, almost color field paintings, or lavish, awash with patterning, details, and dynamic brushwork—to give life to her recurrent women. While we cannot know them, we might sense the (inner) world they inhabit.

Hahn constructs her paintings beginning with a figurative image painted directly onto the canvas; she does not create preparatory drawings, preferring instead to sketch with paint. She often paints the same image on multiple canvases—up to ten at a time—and then works across the canvases simultaneously. Some paintings maintain the structure suggested by the artist’s initial outline, but most morph into radically different compositions, becoming singular elements in a larger body of related works. This mode of working reflects two critical things about the artist’s practice: her understanding of representation and abstraction, and her abiding belief in the process of painting.

Hahn has described abstraction as a mode of “falling apart”—something that was once clear and articulable dissolving. While she begins with a specific representation, each work is determined by an improvisational process and the materiality of paint, which in the artist’s hands runs the gamut from silky dark outlines and inky washes of color to thick impasto topographies and lustrous looping brushstrokes. Hahn offers a deeply painterly version of illustrative tendencies that call to mind the work of such artists such as Joan Brown, Ezra Jack Keats, and Henri Matisse. The resulting paintings bear traces of previous gestures, evidenced in sketchily marked lines visible below thin fields of pigment and in palimpsests of overpainting. They are works that find their own logics in the possibility of paint.

Hahn’s paintings are seemingly simple narratives and elusive, expansive images. Painting here is beyond language, an amalgamation of color, texture, gesture, line, and surface that conveys as much about states of being as a story ever could. Each woman Hahn depicts is in a world unto herself—each painting an embodiment of this world.

Recently, Hahn’s work was included in the group exhibition Pulse at the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, KS that ran from November 2018 through February 2019. Hahn was previously included in the gallery’s group exhibition last fall called Engender.

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