Current Exhibition
April 1 - May 14, 2026
Gallery Exhibition
Ryan Dittmar and Rebecca Giles
Persistence of Still Life
Ryan Dittmar and Rebecca Giles bring the long history of still life into the present, demonstrating how a genre often
associated with tradition remains open to reinvention. Though their practices are unmistakably contemporary, both
artists engage with the same formal problems that shaped the work of their predecessors, including light, surface,
and composition, as well as the unstable relationship between observation and construction. Still life has long
functioned as a site of perceptual and formal experiment, yet it is also a deeply human genre. Its power lies not
only in what is depicted, but in how the world is arranged, seen, and translated into an image. This capacity for
renewal has allowed still life to endure from its development in seventeenth-century Dutch painting to the present.
Ryan Dittmar centers his photographs on the act of arrangement itself. Artificial flowers, a vintage Wheaties box,
and a cowboy boot concealing a demi-baguette are staged in playful compositions that recall the deliberate
constructions of early still life painting. Yet the acidic color, synthetic textures, and visible artifice resist any sense of
natural order. By leaving the process of construction apparent, Dittmar allows nostalgia and estrangement, the old
and the new, the natural and the artificial to exist at once, revealing how the apparent clarity of still life has always
depended on careful intervention.
Rebecca Giles approaches still life through the effects of light, color, and language. Her compositions often center
translucent or reflective forms through which light seems to pass, creating an interior luminosity that becomes the
primary subject. Areas of heightened color complicate the relationship between object and image, shifting still life
away from description and toward sensation. What emerges is less a record of things than an inquiry into
perception itself, asking how objects dissolve into light and color, and how painting can transform the ordinary into
something unstable, elusive, and newly felt.
Persistence of Still Life, in pairing Dittmar and Giles, makes visible the extent to which the genre continues to offer a
productive site for rethinking the relationship between observation and invention, and between material presence
and pictorial construction. What persists, finally, is not simply the genre itself, but its capacity to be remade.
- Curated by Charlotte Kelly
Giles, Plastic Bottles, 2025, oil on linen, 47.5 x 24 inches
Giles, Still Life with Mirror, 2024, oil and collage on matboard, 16 x 16.5 inches
Dittmar Master Copy Game Night 2023 Inkjet print on photographic paper 19inX13in
Contact us
If you have any inquiries or comments, please send us a message using the contact form or email us at info@johnwilliamgallery.com

