Harper’s is pleased to announce Independence Day, Irish artist Genieve Figgis’s third solo exhibition with the gallery. The presentation features new works by Figgis and opens July 5, 6–8pm, with a reception attended by the artist.
Working with rich acrylics, Genieve Figgis draws from eighteenth-century art historical traditions to subvert portraits of luxury and leisure. With fanciful mark-making and dulcet palettes, the artist’s style evokes the elegance and decadence of the Rococo period. Figgis, however, inflects her lavish scenes with chilling and humorous elements. Amidst these works, one might spot ghastly figuration: the faces of Figgis’s upper-class protagonists often dissolve into macabre silhouettes, like apparitions haunting shadowy corridors. And within more risqué works, her subjects strike provocative poses as they proudly gallivant in states of undress.
Imaginary Family, for example, is a parlor tableau warped into phantasmagoric excess. Here, a procession of distorted figures stands against a Georgian façade composed of sanguine pinks and murky mauves, like the fading wallpaper in a long-abandoned manor. Gathered around a pram and dressed in extravagant finery—ruffled sleeves, bonnets, parasols, and tailored coats—the subjects appear as costumed nobles caught in a shadowy masquerade. Like wax effigies left too close to heat, their facial features become indiscernible: they melt into loose brushstrokes that transform their regal poise into a menacing sight.
In other works, like Room with a Dog and In Bed, Figgis pays close attention to interior space, depicting the ostentatious living quarters of yesteryear's aristocracy. The artist’s decorative brushwork takes center stage in the former: swirly pastels form exquisite chandeliers and sumptuous curtains. Though devoid of the human figure, one can imagine an heiress reclining on the striped chaise lounge, leaning into the resplendent grandeur of the leisure class. In the latter, Figgis stages a rosy canopy bed in the middle of a master bedroom; a human skull overlooks the scene from atop a plush pillow in quiet repose.
Ultimately, Figgis is adept at converging contradicting aesthetics of decadence and decay, reimagining the genteel imagery of eighteenth-century portraiture through a critical lens. Her compositions seduce with lush palettes and domestic spaces, only to unsettle with eerie distortions and dark humor. By fusing historical opulence with ghostly figuration, Figgis questions the permanence of wealth, beauty, and power. Independence Day invites viewers to linger between these worlds of refinement and ruin, for it’s here where splendor becomes a bittersweet force.
Genieve Figgis (b. 1972, Dublin, Ireland) received an MFA from the National College of Art and Design, Dublin in 2012. After exhibiting her work in the UK and Ireland, Figgis acquired an international following by means of her social media accounts, which attracted the attention of Richard Prince, among numerous other artists, collectors, and critics. As a result of this initial contact, Figgis exhibited at Harper’s, East Hampton (2016 and 2014), followed by solo exhibitions at Half Gallery, New York (2018 and 2014); Almine Rech, Brussels, London, New York, and Paris (2023, 2021, 2020, 2018, 2017 and 2015); Metropolitan Opera House, New York (2016); and M Woods Museum, Beijing (2023). Her work is held in numerous collections, including Aishti Foundation, Beirut; Bass Museum of Art, and Miami; Pérez Art Museum, Miami. Select publications include Glamorous Spirits, Almine Rech, 2024; Genieve Figgis, Skira Rizzoli, 2017; Making Love with the Devil, Fulton Ryder, 2014. Figgis was recently named Simone Rocha’s “provocative muse” for her Spring/Summer 2025 collection, and was one of the artists included in the sixth edition of Dior Lady Art. Reviews of Figgis’s work has appeared in Artforum, New York Times, and Vogue, among other publications. She currently lives and works in County Wicklow.