Patricia Ayres

Patricia Ayres

  • Rubell Museum, Miami
  • Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara, February 5 - April 17, 2022
  • Mendes Wood DM Gallery Esfíngico Frontal
  • Analog Diary, Some Kind of Monster Roster, Group Exhibition, July 30 - October 9, 2022
  • Matthew Brown Gallery Los Angeles, 'Recent Sculpture' Group Exhibition, April 2 - May 14, 2022
  • Threshold, Group Exhibit, 2023
  • Felix Art Fair, Matthew Brown Gallery, Hollywood Roosevelt Hotel, Los Angeles, February 17-20, 2022
  • Matthew Brown Gallery Los Angeles, 'Bound', Solo 2021
  • Liste Art Fair Basel (solo), Switzerland Fragment Gallery, September 2021
  • Studio Visit with Tom McGlynn at Sharpe Walentas, May 2021
  • Fountainhead Residency
  • MFA Thesis Exhibition, December 2018
  • MFA Thesis Review by Glenn Adamson, 2018
  • Matthew Brown Los Angeles, It Seems So Long Ago, 2020
  • Italy, 2020
  • Sculpture Heads, 2019
  • Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, 2019
  • Koenig & Clinton, entering a song, Group Exhibition, January 18 - February 23, 2019
  • Earlier Work
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  • Fashion
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Curator: Alexandra Terry

Museum of Contemporary Art Santa Barbara (MCASB)

This Basic Asymmetry featuring work by artists Patricia Ayres, Simone Forti, Miguel Angel Payano Jr., Paul Mpagi Sepuya, and Gabriela Ruiz.


Through internal sensation, emotion, and cognition we develop a fluid but strong sense of self that allows us to perceive the complexities and nuances of our personal experience. By contrast, it is only through external sensation, especially vision and observation, that we find the ability to develop an understanding of others, splitting our experience of self from others into an asymmetrical paradigm. Having studied this phenomenon in depth Emily Pronin, Associate Professor of Psychology and Public Affairs at Princeton University proposes, “this basic asymmetry has broad consequences,” potentially leading to misunderstanding and disconnection. Pronin suggests that we tend to perceive ourselves via ‘introspection’ and others via ‘extrospection,’ judging others based on what we see, but ourselves based on what we think and feel. 

This Basic Asymmetry presents the work of five artists whose practices make available their personal processes of introspection, creating a space for the viewer to reflect on their own relationship to their bodies and how that informs one’s perception of others. Addressing the dissonance in our reckoning between self and other, the works exhibited here accommodate space for mutual exploration. Through vulnerability, observation, recognition, and recollection the artwork in This Basic Asymmetry explores new opportunities for perceptions that are inclusive of both self and other. As Pronin states: “understanding the psychological basis of those differences may help mitigate some of their negative effects.”*


*Pronin, E. (2008). How we see ourselves and how we see others. Science, 320, 1177–1180.


This Basic Asymmetry is curated by Alexandra Terry, Chief Curator, MCASB.