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WHAT WILL YOU GIVE? 

Veronica Fernandez

Tidawhitney Lek 

Sidecar is pleased to present What Will You Give?, an exhibition of large-scale paintings by Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek, organized in collaboration with Melanie Ouyang Lum. This is the first presentation at Sidecar for both artists.

Installation view of "What Will You Give?" by Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek at Sidecar Gallery.

Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek, What Will You Give?, installation view, 2024

What will you give? Artists and friends Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek explore this question on and off canvas. Their paintings abound with generosity, empathy, wonder, delight, and hope. Both women plumb the depths of their experiences to render the ecstasy and agony of the human condition in painterly bids for connection and acts of witness. In densely layered compositions that merge past and present, inherited and embodied memories, self and other, both artists give form to stories of love and loss as personal as they are universal.

A large two panel painting of three children playing football in the rain between two white gazebos with garbage scattered on the ground.

Veronica Fernandez, Sweet Rain, Just For Us, 2024

A detail of a young girl smiling with braids in Veronica Fernandez's "Sweet Rain, Just For Us", 2024

Veronica Fernandez, Sweet Rain, Just For Us, detail, 2024

Employing their distinctive visual languages, the pair index domestic family dramas, childhood memories, and locations integral to their identities and histories. The tenderness, vulnerability, and economic/social hardships animated by their compositions solicit from the viewer what scholar Tina M. Campt might call hapticity, or the “labor of feeling across difference and precarity; the effort of feeling implicated or affected in ways that create restorative intimacy.” In this way, the paintings engender occasions of reciprocity and exchange.

A painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a parking lot with a bush of yellow daisies sprouting out from beside a sign post and a parked car against a background of a ruptured wire fence and a sunset in gradient blues, yellows and pinks.

Tidawhitney Lek, Auto Corner, 2024

Installation view of "What Will You Give?" by Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek at Sidecar Gallery.

Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek, What Will You Give?, installation view, 2024

For example, Fernandez’s large-scale mixed-media paintings oscillate between obscurity and revelation, with precisely detailed representations unraveling into gestural brushstrokes, washes of color, and uncanny shifts in scope or scale that engage the viewer’s imagination through irresolution. Marshaling texture to disrupt the pictorial plane, Fernandez applies paint straight from the tube or builds dense layers of oil in quasi-bas relief dimensionality. Moments of dissolution and disruption evoke the instability of memory, the impermanence of emotion, and the ambiguity of psychological processing.

Designing a psychic space between biography, memory, emotional resonance, and poetic recitation, Fernandez references old photographs to assemble family members in scenes of affection, instability, chaos, and economic insecurity. A tension ensues between Fernandez's present perspective, full of empathy for her authority figures’ realities, and her childhood fear, anxiety, and uncertainty. As Fernandez transcends form via flourishes of color and dreamy conjugations of mark and materiality, she reminds the viewer of the complex interplay of recollection and the present moment.

A two panel painting of a family scene inside their home with a burst of flame and ghostly figures emerging from a red space within the home.

Veronica Fernandez, The Last Ten Dollars, 2024

Detail of Veronica Fernandez's "The Last Ten Dollars" depicting a pile of pots and plates with a burst of flame emerging from a large cauldron.

Veronica Fernandez, The Last Ten Dollars, detail, 2024

Installation view of "What Will You Give?" by Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek at Sidecar Gallery.

Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek, What Will You Give?, installation view, 2024

The Last Ten Dollars (2024) memorializes the time Fernandez’s father gave away the only money he had—an act both generous and irresponsible. The artist interrupts the composition with a flash of fire alarm red. Her careful representation of her characters and their kitchen setting is overwhelmed by images that hover between reality and invention: A shadow looms across the wall, the kitchen lights redouble in defiance of gravity, and a column of flames unfurls from a cooking pan.

A three panel painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a man in  red sweatshirt walking into a liquor store wherein the silhouettes of men in military attire read the TV guide.

Tidawhitney Lek, Richie’s Liquor, 2024

Detail of Tidawhitney Lek's "Richie's Liquor" depicting a monarch butterfly in flight in front of a stained wall.

Tidawhitney Lek, Richie’s Liquor, 2024

Installation view of "What Will You Give?" by Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek at Sidecar Gallery.

Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek, What Will You Give?, installation view, 2024

If Fernandez employs entropic forces to mirror the disorder of her childhood, Lek’s paintings drive toward clarity and resolution. Her canvases evoke her family’s refusal to acknowledge latent trauma and unspoken suffering, insisting instead on surface-level denial or silence. Like Fernandez, Lek pushes against the bounds of representation, foraying into abstraction.

A three panel painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting the entrance to a business with Thai script across the glass beside a metal railing in front of a sunset seascape with yellow flowers blooming.

Tidawhitney Lek, Travel Agency, 2024

Detail of Tidawhitney Lek's "Travel Agency" depicting a mailbox covered in stickers and graffiti.

Tidawhitney Lek, Travel Agency, detail, 2024

The irreducible there-ness of Lek’s lucid hyper-realism engenders an illusion so convincing that the viewer is all but confident they could step into the canvas and open the glass door. Lek plays with perspective and scale. She skews her compositions just beyond life-sized. Her trompe l’oeil details and vivid color palettes conjure verisimilitude, while discordant details and conflations of interior and exterior, near and far, lend the compositions a surreality. The vertiginous combination of mundane scenery and uncanny incongruence illuminates that there is more to the story than meets the eye.

Installation view of "What Will You Give?" by Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek at Sidecar Gallery.

Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek, What Will You Give?, installation view, 2024

The dissonance and density of the picture planes suggest a layering of variant perspectives that merge old narratives with new, physicalizing the invisible ways that inherited memories inhabit embodied presence. Here, the past materializes ghosts, unsettling shadows, and a sense of dislocation, estranging even the familiar. Still, unexpected delights present themselves—a radiant bush flowers in a parking lot, while a pane of glass reflects a technicolor sunset.

A painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a woman in business attire asleep in a chair with a young girl on her lap and a dog playing by her feet in a garden surrounded by fencing.

Tidawhitney Lek, To Little Me (Ronnie), 2024

Detail of Tidawhitney Lek's "To Little Me (Ronnie)" depicting a woman asleep in a chair.

Tidawhitney Lek, To Little Me (Ronnie) detail, 2024

Installation view of "What Will You Give?" by Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek at Sidecar Gallery.

Veronica Fernandez and Tidawhitney Lek, What Will You Give?, installation view, 2024

Lek’s ability to hold opposing truths manifests in Richie’s Liquor (2024), in which a young man in contemporary clothing is poised on the threshold of a rain-stained building. Stacks of familiar corner store products like newspapers and water jugs appear in the store’s windows, but hovering above them: two men in foreign military uniforms, interlopers from the Vietnam War which forced families, including the artist’s, to immigrate to the United States. The colorful reflection of the sky, mirrored by a composite section on the right, further confuses the interior and exterior of the building, the seen and unseen, the public and the private.

Both artists, in their sui generis styles, give form to the invisible, reminding viewers of paintings' ability to imagine the world transfigured.

–Tara Anne Dalbow

A painting by Veronica Fernandez of children play wrestling in a living room with a dog while a white ghostly silhouette of a boy appears to leap out of a tv that airs a wrestling program.

Veronica Fernandez, Pillowflight (Nobody Is Coming to Protect You), 2024

Detail of Veronica Fernandez's "Pillowflight (Nobody Is Coming to Protect You)", 2024, depicting a wrestling match on tv.

Veronica Fernandez, Pillowflight (Nobody Is Coming to Protect You), detail, 2024

Portrait of the artist Veronica Fernandez in her studio.

Veronica Fernandez portrait by Roman Koval 

Veronica Fernandez (b. 1998, Norfolk, VA) draws from memory to illustrate the complexities of domestic life; her paintings explore relationships between people and their environments. Referencing family photographs and art historical works, Fernandez blurs personal recollections into emotive scenes that evoke a shared nostalgia. She reworks the familiar, transforming what is hers into unfamiliar, expansive new realms. Drawing attention to the impermanence of emotions, Fernandez allows her narratives to remain open-ended. As she shares her experience, she raises questions about where we come from, how we are shaped, and how we interact with one another. Fernandez has held solo exhibitions at Galleria Poggiali, Milan, Italy and Sow & Tailor, Los Angeles, CA, among others. She has participated in group shows at JTT, New York, NY; Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH; Sow & Tailor, Hong Kong; Jenkins Johnson Gallery, Brooklyn, NY; Thierry Goldberg Gallery, New York City, NY; and other galleries and institutions. Her work is in the collections of Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH; Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami, FL; Pond Society, Shanghai, China; and X Museum, Beijing, China. The artist lives and works in Los Angeles, CA.

Portrait of the artist Tidawhitney Lek in her studio.

Tidawhitney Lek portrait by Roman Koval

Tidawhitney Lek (b. 1992, Long Beach, CA) is a Cambodian-American painter. Her work plays with narrative and the everyday experience of a first-generation American born to immigrant parents. Her bright and somber paintings present nuances of domesticity. Figures and hands interact in her compositions as cultural Southeast-Asian elements echo through mundane objects. Lek reinvents the conventional mediums of pastel, acrylic, and oil paints on canvas, interchanging textures as pictorial spaces recede and soften. Lek’s work has been exhibited at Jeffrey Deitch, New York, NY & Los Angeles, CA; the Long Beach Museum of Art, Long Beach, CA; Institute of Contemporary Art Miami, Miami, FL; the Armory Show, New York, NY; and Made in LA 2023 at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA, among other galleries and institutions. Her work has been acquired by Columbus Museum of Art, Columbus, OH; East West Bank Collection, Pasadena, CA; Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; K11 Foundation, Hong Kong; ICA Miami, Miami, FL; Perez Art Museum Miami, Miami, FL; and Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles, CA.

A large two panel painting of three children playing football in the rain between two white gazebos with garbage scattered on the ground.

Veronica Fernandez

Sweet Rain, Just For Us, 2024

acrylic and oil on canvas

78 x 168 in (198.1 x 426.7 cm) 

Inquire
A painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a parking lot with a bush of yellow daisies sprouting out from beside a sign post and a parked car against a background of a ruptured wire fence and a sunset in gradient blues, yellows and pinks.

Tidawhitney Lek

Auto Corner, 2024

glitter, charcoal, acrylic and oil on canvas

108 x 84 in (274.3 x 213.4 cm)

Inquire
A two panel painting of a family scene inside their home with a burst of flame and ghostly figures emerging from a red space within the home.

Veronica Fernandez

The Last Ten Dollars, 2024

oil on canvas

78 x 168 in (198.1 x 426.7 cm) 

A three panel painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a man in  red sweatshirt walking into a liquor store wherein the silhouettes of men in military attire read the TV guide.

Tidawhitney Lek

Richie’s Liquor, 2024

glitter, pastel, acrylic and oil on canvas

72 x 144 in (182.9 x 365.8 cm)

A three panel painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting the entrance to a business with Thai script across the glass beside a metal railing in front of a sunset seascape with yellow flowers blooming.

Tidawhitney Lek

Travel Agency, 2024

glitter, acrylic, and oil on canvas

72 x 144 in (182.9 x 365.8 cm)

A painting by Veronica Fernandez of children play wrestling in a living room with a dog while a white ghostly silhouette of a boy appears to leap out of a tv that airs a wrestling program.

Veronica Fernandez

Pillowflight (Nobody Is Coming to Protect You), 2024

acrylic and oil on canvas

96 x 84 in (243.8 x 213.4 cm)

A painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a woman in business attire asleep in a chair with a young girl on her lap and a dog playing by her feet in a garden surrounded by fencing.

Tidawhitney Lek

To Little Me (Ronnie), 2024

glitter, acrylic and oil canvas

72 x 48 in (182.9 x 121.9 cm)

A large two panel painting of three children playing football in the rain between two white gazebos with garbage scattered on the ground.

Veronica Fernandez

Sweet Rain, Just For Us, 2024

acrylic and oil on canvas

78 x 168 in (198.1 x 426.7 cm) 

A painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a parking lot with a bush of yellow daisies sprouting out from beside a sign post and a parked car against a background of a ruptured wire fence and a sunset in gradient blues, yellows and pinks.

Tidawhitney Lek

Auto Corner, 2024

glitter, charcoal, acrylic and oil on canvas

108 x 84 in (274.3 x 213.4 cm)

A two panel painting of a family scene inside their home with a burst of flame and ghostly figures emerging from a red space within the home.

Veronica Fernandez

The Last Ten Dollars, 2024

oil on canvas

78 x 168 in (198.1 x 426.7 cm) 

A three panel painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a man in  red sweatshirt walking into a liquor store wherein the silhouettes of men in military attire read the TV guide.

Tidawhitney Lek

Richie’s Liquor, 2024

glitter, pastel, acrylic and oil on canvas

72 x 144 in (182.9 x 365.8 cm)

A three panel painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting the entrance to a business with Thai script across the glass beside a metal railing in front of a sunset seascape with yellow flowers blooming.

Tidawhitney Lek

Travel Agency, 2024

glitter, acrylic, and oil on canvas

72 x 144 in (182.9 x 365.8 cm)

A painting by Veronica Fernandez of children play wrestling in a living room with a dog while a white ghostly silhouette of a boy appears to leap out of a tv that airs a wrestling program.

Veronica Fernandez

Pillowflight (Nobody Is Coming to Protect You), 2024

acrylic and oil on canvas

96 x 84 in (243.8 x 213.4 cm)

A painting by Tidawhitney Lek depicting a woman in business attire asleep in a chair with a young girl on her lap and a dog playing by her feet in a garden surrounded by fencing.

Tidawhitney Lek

To Little Me (Ronnie), 2024

glitter, acrylic and oil canvas

72 x 48 in (182.9 x 121.9 cm)