House Guest: Gabe Cortese

Saturday, May 30, 2026 at 1:00 PM to Thursday, June 11, 2026 at 1:00 PM

Nazarian / Curcio, Los Angeles

House Guest extends Cortese’s engagement with narrative as a fragmented system, where meaning accumulates through sequence and context. Comprising nearly twenty intimately scaled paintings, the exhibition marks a shift from narratives contained within individual works to one that unfolds across the exhibition as a whole. The title House Guest signals a presence that arrives, lingers, and quietly alters a space. Each painting holds the trace of something past, suggesting events that have occurred but are no longer visible. Within this framework, the home is no longer neutral: familiar space becomes unsettled, absorbing prior presence. Narrative operates less as storytelling than as a felt condition shaped by perception, attachment, and loss, where presence is registered through absence. The figure, long central to Cortese’s practice, appears within interior space for the first time. Walls, thresholds, windows, and floors become the primary stage for small, charged moments: a figure at a window, a candle burning, a knife resting on a ledge. Each work holds a sustained tension, where desire and danger intersect, and ambiguity draws the viewer closer. Intimacy emerges not in spite of risk, but through it, as attraction and unease remain closely bound. Five recurring archetypes––the candle, the man, the wilted flower, the knife, and the shadow––structure the exhibition. These elements function not as fixed symbols but as mutable carriers of narrative and affect. The candle, in particular, recurs as both a light source and a temporal marker, oscillating between material and immaterial states. This shift is reflected in scale, as full figuration gives way to fragments and objects. Candles, knives, and flowers assume greater narrative weight, compressing emotion into focused arrangements. In this reduction, the paintings move toward stillness, where meaning emerges through proximity rather than event. Works such as Catalyst and A Premonition reduce the flame to an elemental presence, while others like Wound and Threshold isolate gesture and contact as residual traces. Art historical references, including Lamentation of Christ by Andrea Mantegna, Young Woman with a Lighted Candle at a Window by Gerrit Dou, and Two Monkeys by Pieter Bruegel the Elder, are absorbed as latent structures, informing the work’s attention to illumination, containment, and allegorical tension. Subtle references to mortality surface throughout, not as spectacle but as a condition that reshapes the perception of domestic space. As loss becomes more immediate, the familiar is quietly dislodged, producing moments in which presence and absence remain in active tension. Rather than resolving into narrative closure, House Guest holds meaning in suspension, forming a field of relation in which presence, absence, and transformation remain in continuous exchange.