Jordan Kerwick

Sirens of Venice

November 22th –
January 24th, 2026
Venezia
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Motor Spirit Venice 1,2025
    Oil, acrylic, marker & spray on canvas
    42 x 59 cm (16 ½ x 23 ¼ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Motor Spirit Venice 2,2025
    Oil, acrylic, marker & spray on canvas
    42 x 59 cm (16 ½ x 23 ¼ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Motor Spirit Wild Ones,2025
    Oil, acrylic, marker & spray on canvas
    42 x 59 cm (16 ½ x 23 ¼ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Motor Spirit The Untamed,2025
    Oil, acrylic, marker & spray on canvas
    59 x 42 cm (23 ¼ x 16 ½ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Motor Spirit,2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on canvas
    61 x 50 cm (24 x 19 ⅝ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Sirens of Venice,2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on canvas
    200 x 180 cm (78 ¾ x 70 ⅞ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Nude on Pragondola,2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on canvas
    120 x 200 cm (47 ¼ x 78 ¾ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Canal Battle,2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on canvas
    160 x 180 cm (63 x 70 ⅞ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Sirens of St Antonin (Give Praise, Hell Raise),2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on canvas
    100 x 120 cm (39 ⅜ x 47 ¼ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Nude in Praise,2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on stretched linen
    80 x 100 cm (31 ½ x 39 ⅜ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Sirens of Venice (Motor Spirit Thogs of God),2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on stretched linen
    80 x 100 cm (31 ½ x 39 ⅜ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Motor Spirit Rebel,2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on raw linen
    50 x 65 cm (19 ⅝ x 25 ⅝ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Motor Spirit,2025
    Acrylic, spray & oil on canvas
    230 x 207 cm (90 ½ x 81 ½ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Untitled,2022
    Oil pastel on paper
    58 x 75 cm (22 ⅞ x 29 ½ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Untitled,2022
    Oil pastel on paper
    42 x 59 cm (16 ½ x 23 ¼ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Untitled,2022
    Oil pastel on paper
    42 x 59 cm (16 ½ x 23 ¼ in)
  • Jordan Kerwick
    Untitled,2025
    Oil pastel on paper
    60 x 40 cm (23 ⅝ x 15 ¾ in)

Patricia Low Venezia is delighted to present a solo exhibition of new paintings by Melbourne born artist Jordy Kerwick. Titled Sirens of Venice, the exhibition explores Kerwick’s phantasmagoric painterly universe, occupied by predatory beasts and zoomorphic figures. The title of the exhibition nods to the status of Venice as a city situated on water, prone to flooding, and to the mythical creatures from antiquity who menaced the seas. In Greek mythology, sirens were alluring hybrids, half woman, half bird, singing sailors to their doom. Kerwick’s paintings, too, captivate with their vividly colourful, patterned forms. His visions seem to exist in a place built from folklore and fantasy, myth and mania – animated by a sense of play, yet laced with threat. On view is the painting Battle of Venice (all works 2025), featuring pairs of creature-combatants facing off in the centre of the canvas. Their bodies are those of large feathered birds, though they are also reminiscent of galleons, sprouting serpentine or dragon-like heads, sometimes with pairs of gaping jaws – one denoting sustenance, the other menace.

Kerwick’s inspirations include Henri Matisse’s Jazz era, as well as children’s illustrated books, the 1963 stop-motion classic Jason and the Argonauts, and 1970s boudoir photography. Teeming with life and colour, his canvases are a collage of elements, painted in a time- intensive process that involves layering paint on paint – spray, acrylic and oil – to make richly textured surfaces. Kerwick’s earliest paintings were still-lifes, and the show includes an evolution of those early works with Motor Spirit (The Untamed), in which a spread-out rug is a canvas for a collection of patterns, disembodied jaws, and a kind of feathered odalisque. Some of the works on show are painted on plain backgrounds, while others, like Battle of Venice and Sirens of Venice have backgrounds suggestive of sea and landscapes. In the latter, the figure is a kind of canvas/landscape too, composed of varied features and topographies, even animal attributes – creatures from a fantastical pantheon.

true

Jordy Kerwick (b. Melbourne, Australia, 1982) is an artist based in Gaillac, France. Self-taught, Kerwick took up painting in 2016 after working in music. His richly layered paintings and strongly defined visual language quickly came to the attention of galleries and collectors, and his work has been exhibited in solo shows at the Yorkshire Sculpture Park (UK) and Museo Thyssen in Madrid (Spain), as well as in group shows at institutions including LACMA (US) and the Jewish Museum of Australia. Kerwick’s work is in the permanent collections of the Museo Nacional Centro de Arte Reina Sofía, Madrid, Spain, the Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO, USA, the ICA Miami, Florida, USA, and Fulton Ryder (Richard Prince), among others.

Subscribe to Our Newsletter


© PLC Gstaad GmbH. All rights reserved. Made by Creapowa