Jenny Phillips

 

Sidewalking

Exhibition on View: May 2 to June 27, 2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 4

framed to 48 × 48 inches

Monotype

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking grid of 15

Grid size measures 60 x 100 inches

Each panel is 20 × 20 inches

Monotypes mounted on wood panel

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 16

21.50 × 41.50 Inches diptych framed

Monotype and powdered pigments

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 11

21.50 × 41.50 Inches diptych framed

Monotype and powdered pigments

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking grouping of 8

60 x 40, 20 x 20 each panel

Monotypes on wood panel

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 5

12 ×12 inches

Monotypes, spray paint

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Snippet

6 ×6 inches

Monotype on panel

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 16

8 × 8 inches

Monotypes on panel

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 1

21.50 × 41.50 Inches diptych framed

Monotype

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 7, 2025

21.50 × 41.50 Inches diptych framed

Monotype and powdered pigmentsMonotypes

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 14 and 15

Each panel is 12 × 12 inches

Monotypes with spray paint on panel

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 27

32 x 18 on panel

Monotypes

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 14, 2025

36 × 18 inches (two 18 × 18 panels)

Monotypes, mounted on wood panel

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking 20

36 x 20 on panel

Monotypes

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 3, 2, 1

Each panel is 8 × 8 inches

Monotypes with watercolor on panel

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 6 and 7

Each panel is 8 × 8 inches

Monotypes with spray paint on panel

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 8

Each panel is 8 × 8 inches

Monotypes, gouache

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 17

8 × 8 inches

Monotypes on panel

2026

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 40

20 × 20 inches

Monotypes, spray paint

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 10

8 × 8 inches

Monotypes on panel

2025

Jenny Phillips

Sidewalking Sampling 11

8 × 8 inches

Monotypes on panel

2025

Exhibition Views

Coming May 2026

Statement

I work from feeling rather than ideology. Inspired by the ordinary and the everyday, I respond to the personal moments in my environment, discovering beauty in expected and the unexpected, gleaning its essence from the places and objects I encounter.

Distilling images into their simplest form is my ultimate goal. Not much is often enough. I strive to absorb the tempo of the everyday, whether from the meter of my step, the rhythm of the seasons, or the sense of the fleeting and tenuous beauty that surrounds us. It is these subliminal emotions, these moments in time, that I strive to capture in my work.

My multidisciplinary approach relies on a variety of materials such as paper, thread, wax, natural pigments, papier mâché, graphite, inks, watercolor and washes, and found objects. One piece can include many forms of inspiration—netted fruit bags, feathers, X-acto blades, grass, looms, whisks, twigs, shadows, fog and fire, or scraps of wire to name a few. Even discarded remnants become a source of inspiration: I use and reuse almost all of any one material in the making process. Painted paper photographed for one series can become a mural, then used in an encaustic piece, or sewn onto something else for documenting.

I’m trying to balance simplicity of expression with spontaneity of gesture to evoke the essence of the everyday. Like taking a walk, following the seasons, taking a breath—my work documents the places and times when the ordinary takes us by surprise.

-Jenny Phillips

Bio

Jenny Phillips is an artist based in San Francisco, CA. She grew up in Eastern Long Island, Majorca and New York City. She majored in Art History at Denison University, where she was a teaching assistant in the printmaking department and was awarded the Woodrow Deckman Studio Art Scholarship. Moving back to New York City, she spent her formative years at the Brooklyn Academy of Music during the late 80’s and early 90’s working as a graphic designer. The combination of theater, dance and music that Jenny witnessed at BAM continues to inform her work today, both in the moods she creates and in the gestures and rhythms she employs.

She relocated to San Francisco in 1998, and as the world of graphic design shifted away from the physical and into the digital, Jenny’s love of making things eventually prompted her to pursue a full time career in art. She studied at California College of Arts, the San Francisco Art Institute, and the Kala Art Institute. Since 2010, she has exhibited her works throughout California and the US.


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Arthur Drooker