Julie Green: Where the Field Begins to Sing

Thursday, June 17, 2027 at 1:00 PM to Thursday, January 20, 2028 at 1:00 PM

Keystone Art Space, Los Angeles

There is music in the spacing of the spheres - PythagorasFeaturing all new works (2025-2026) by artist Julie Green, her solo exhibition Where the Field Begins to Sing proposes that the imaginative landscape is not silent. It vibrates beneath structure. It hums within color. It waits in tension across string and surface. And in the moment of encounter — between artwork and viewer — the field begins to sing.Green’s practice is situated within a lineage of abstraction that treats color not as description, but as event. Her work extends conversations initiated by early modernist painters who understood chromatic relationships as spiritual or musical phenomena, yet it moves decisively into a contemporary register — one grounded in embodied perception, neural multiplicity, and participatory experience.Central to this exhibition is the phenomenon of chromesthesia, in which sound is experienced as color. Rather than illustrating this condition, Green builds its spatial equivalent. Her compositions imagine a cognitive field in which neural connections remain abundant and unpruned — where associations proliferate and perception branches outward. The resulting visual language explores Green’s personal experience with this cross sensorial perception.The introduction of playable musical strings across select works shifts the exhibition from metaphor to activation. Tensioned across constructed surfaces, these strings transform line into literal vibration. When touched, the work responds. The viewer’s gesture produces sound, collapsing the boundary between observer and participant. The field is no longer a visual suggestion of resonance; it becomes a resonant body.This participatory dimension situates Green’s work within a contemporary discourse that values sensory hybridity and cross-modal experience. In an era increasingly mediated by screens and flattened images, her relief forms insist on tactility, depth, and physical engagement. The exhibition invites viewers not merely to look, but to listen — and, in some cases, to play.The repetition of line and form throughout various works evokes musical notation without becoming illustrative. Color functions structurally, like harmony. The works unfold temporally, asking the eye to move across them as one might follow a melody.Abstraction here is not detached or austere. It is sensorial, immersive, and relational. The “field” of the title refers simultaneously to landscape, perceptual space, and electromagnetic resonance — an expanded zone where vision and audition converge. In Green’s hands, the geometric plane becomes a site of listening.