Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 01

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 02

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 03

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 04

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 05

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 06

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 07

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaksa | Sacrifice | Russo Lee Gallery | April 2021 | Installation View 08

Installation View

Elizabeth Malaska - We Will Remain Separate, 2020

We Will Remain Separate

2020

Flashe, oil, and pencil on canvas over panel

78 x 120 inches

Elizabeth Malaska - Revelations

Revelations

2020

Flashe, oil, pencil, and rhinestone on canvas over panel

78 x 120 inches

Elizabeth Malaska - Couple, 2020

Couple

2020

Flashe, oil, and pencil on canvas over panel

78 x 60 inches

Elizabeth Malaska - Chimeras, 2020

Chimeras

2020

Flashe, oil, gel medium, and pencil on canvas over panel

60 x 72 inches

Elizabeth Malaska (b. 1978)  Study (2), 2020

Elizabeth Malaska

Study (2)

2020

charcoal on reclaimed paper

29.5 x 27.5 inches framed

Press Release

For the month of April, Russo Lee Gallery is pleased to present Sacrifice by Elizabeth Malaska. This exhibition features 4 large-scale paintings, 2 of which are diptychs. Malaska creates complicated narratives by layering multiple figures and scenes within a scene; some elements are in sharp focus while others are gestural and expressive. Her figures, often female, are surrounded by everyday contemporary objects such as screens, sneakers, and keyboards, which along with cats and vessels and a myriad of patterns, take on mythic meaning in her work. Born and raised in Portland, Malaska earned her MFA from the Pacific Northwest College of Art, after receiving a BFA from the California College of the Arts. Her work is in the permanent collections of the Portland Art Museum, The Harold and Arlene Schnitzer Collection in Portland, and, more recently, her work was acquired by the Schneider Museum of Art at Southern Oregon University in Ashland.