23 June 2026
Instead of evoking the illusionistic depths of representational painting, San Francisco artist Ranu Mukherjee’s latest show “The Long Middle” at Gallery Wendi Norris in San Francisco exposes the painted surface as a complex and multi-layered series of screens. The scrims muddle traditional delineations between background and foreground, between abstraction and realism, and organic and machine-based mark making.
To achieve this end, the base-painted canvas is consistently veiled by semi-transparent saris, which are embroidered or painted and sometimes layered once more in a visual cacophony of shifting focal points. Underlying representational images—a human torso, or woodpecker, for example—aren’t immediately apparent, rather emerging before one’s eyes with time, furtive and often incomplete, from the fray of perception. Soft-filtering layers thus evoke the multitudinous suite of realities inflecting everyday life.
Any given moment is commonly made from a mishmash of personal and public digital screens, human-built environments, weather, foliage, social dissonance and memory. If Renaissance painting’s three-point perspective triumphed by conveying the world view of three dimensions, Mukherjee aims to capture the ungrounded barrage of surfaces comprising a 21st century subjectivity.



