Murmuration

“I’m interested in connection, which is a provocation of the art world in a way. Critics and writers are not at all interested in beauty. They find it outdated, I find it to be the opposite.”

-TODD MURPHY

September 28, 2015

If I paint a woman, then it already starts to define the narrative…..If it's the dress, people can finish the narrative themselves.

TODD MURPHY 2011

OCTOBER 28, 2014

“The dress, the stag, the birds: These are images that can mean different things to different people."

TODD MURPHY AJC 2011, Forbes 2016

Murphy's Murmurations series deftly illustrates the metaphorical leap from the everyday object to the visual associations embedded within it.

SEPH RODNEY “Seeing Spectral Visions in Fulsome Skirts”, Hyperallergic, 2016

  • Using the dress, a culturally loaded motif, Murphy starts a narrative that touches upon grand themes of nature, technology, and humanity over the past two hundred years. The skirts are clear and shaped like bell jars that encase free standing sculptures.

    Kate Murphy Art Muse NYC

  • Murphy's Murmurations series deftly illustrates the metaphorical leap from the everyday object to the visual associations embedded within it.

    Seph Rodney

    Seeing Spectral Visions in Fulsome Skirts, Hyperallergic 2016

  • Murphy's work feels anachronistic, like it's swimming against a contemporary tide that moves toward a shore of disenchantment. Our culture constantly reminds us of the ugly underbelly of things. Murphy lets us instead be bewitched.

    Seph Rodney

    Seeing Spectral Visions in Fulsome Skirts, Hyperallergic 2016

  • The exhibition culminates in the final room, which unveils the artist’s latest Murmurations series. Using the dress, a culturally loaded motif, Murphy starts a narrative that touches upon grand themes of nature, technology, and humanity over the past two hundred years.

    Kate Murphy

    Art Fuse 2016

  • Murphy’s studio is filled with dress forms, dresses, bell-shaped skirts and women’s bodices made in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In his work, women stand for humanity.

    —Barbara Stehle