Using ordinary materials found around the house, New York based artist Thomas Doyle creates dioramas that feature tiny hand-painted figures surrounded by  domesticity and destruction. In the solo exhibition “Surface to Air,”  houses hover safely above their ruined and burnt foundations while  soldiers huddle below. A family goes about its business inside a home  that has been cleaved in two. A subterranean house juts from the earth,  as a family trudges through an ash-strewn landscape above. Reflective of  the apprehension endemic to our times, Doyle’s works also communicate a  timeless longing for the stability of home, hearth, and family.
“Surface  to Air” will also debut Doyle’s new Foregone series, consisting of  photographic portraits of the child figures that feature prominently in  his sculptural work. Measuring just a few millimeters high, each figure  is hand painted and then photographed in an enlarged format, revealing  detail unseen by the naked eye. Coated in a patina of microscopic  debris, the figures reveal the limitations and random nature of painting  while evoking the tenderness and anxieties of childhood.
Surface to Air runs through December 17, 2011 at LeBasse Projects in Culver City.
  

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