A Painter With an Eye for the Ridiculous

T Introduces highlights the debut of a singular person, place or thing.


When the Canadian artist Ambera Wellmann painted “Strobe” (2021), a Surrealist beach landscape measuring 30 feet in length, she had just moved to New York, where she’d found representation with Company Gallery. Before that, she’d produced relatively small works, but now she was thinking big. “New York loves sensationalism in a way that’s kind of refreshing,” she says. “People like to make a splash.”

When the piece was included in the 2021 New Museum Triennial, it did just that. And while none of the paintings in her upcoming solo show — opening simultaneously next year in Manhattan at Company and Hauser & Wirth, which now jointly represent her — are quite so enormous, they also allude to the ocean and its degradation. “If the sea can no longer house anything,” asks Wellmann, “where does mythology live?”

Wellmann, 42, grew up surrounded by water in rural Nova Scotia, the second of three children in a working-class family. “I wanted to be an artist since I was very young, in the most clichéd way,” she says, though she didn’t attend art school until she was 25, eventually receiving an M.F.A. from the University of Guelph in Ontario.


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