Anna Zorina Gallery is pleased to announce Awkward, a group exhibition 
curated by Shaun Ellison. The exhibition features eight painters that 
are united in the pursuit of denying technical conventions of realism. 
Instinct, direct perception and spontaneous feeling guide each artist’s 
mark making. This allows for unexpected, and at times, ungraceful 
elements to emerge from within their subjective conceptions
 of the world. The impulsiveness with which the artists express their 
immediate sensations unlocks the potential to portray a perspective that
 is intimate and unapologetically awkward.
Siro Cugusi – 
“Awkward relates to the original gesture. I believe the original gesture
 is the best. It has to do with imprecision, transience, incompleteness 
and imperfection. Awkward means uncertainty and truth at the same time.”
John Bradford – “When, early on, I started painting from my 
imagination, I gave up the fluid hand that happens when responding to 
nature and it was difficult. It felt artificial and, yes, awkward. I 
eventually got back the hand but with texture and rigor added. I also 
kept the awkward; it felt natural.”
 Katherine Bradford - “To 
paint in an awkward style means a loose handling of paint and a 
forgiving attitude toward surprise mishaps. Somehow these turn out to be
 just what we wanted but couldn’t have imagined.” 
Shaun Ellison – “Awkward to me means: a vulnerability to the process
 and an openness to accidents.” William Hawkins – “You paint as you go.”
 Paul Housley – “Being awkward I would use the word difficult. It’s a 
place that lies between desire and attainment. But my foolishness is my 
own, and belongs to no God, not even the ones of Painting.”
 
Cristina Lama – “Awkward, in painting, as unifying concept, I think it 
alludes to an intuitive way of tackling the work, without complexes and 
with an implicit will to get away from any academic restraint, precepts 
and dogmas, just responding to fundamentally pictorial guidelines as a 
nontransferable language.”
 Tim Stoner – “I'm not that interested in logic or any level of self 
deconstruction when I am actually making the work, I feel that painting 
is a moment, or a series of moments that work when one is unanchored 
from the rules of style or language.”
Anna Zorina Gallery
West 23 Street, 533
New York NY 10011 United States
www.annazorinagallery.com