Saxon Quinn: We Found a Crouton Underneath a Futon.

Saturday, September 13, 2025 at 1:00 PM to Saturday, November 1, 2025 at 1:00 PM

de boer, Los Angeles

de boer (Los Angeles) is pleased to present new work by Saxon Quinn, the Australia-based artist whose practice threads material experimentation with personal recollection and cultural critique. The exhibition takes its title from a reimagined lyric in the song Uno II by the Viagra Boys—a phrase as absurd as it is intimate: “I found a crouton underneath a futon. Mama said I couldn’t eat it ’cause all my teeth are gone.”This unlikely poetic fragment unearths a vivid memory for the artist: the blue futon from his family’s home—once a communal site for teenage movies, meals, and dreams. But beneath the humor and specificity of the lyric is a deeper psychic resonance. The seven sculptures in the exhibition are not strictly autobiographical, yet their making became a quiet process of excavation. Memories surfaced—of friends, of uneven upbringings, and of the unspoken disparities that shape how we move through the world. What tools do we inherit—emotionally, culturally, materially—and how do they ready or fail us for adulthood?Each work is meticulously composed, merging ceramic, paint, and found material with a studied, intuitive hand. Faces give way to heads; heads are split, reassembled, glazed, re-glazed—portraits that hover between the personal and the archetypal. The sculptures recall the fragile intimacy of a party documented in flash photography: fragmented, revealing, emotionally overexposed. Notably, each head rests atop a book or zine—objects from Quinn’s studio and intellectual orbit. These are not merely pedestals, but conceptual scaffolds—supportive presences that shape the body of the work as surely as clay or glaze. Literature becomes structure. Memory becomes method.