HEIRLOOM BARNS
FORGOTTEN HOUSES
April 25 - May 31, 2025
Mercury 20 Gallery
475 25th Street, Oakland CA
Opening Reception: April 25, 3-5pm
Artist Talk: May 17 3-5pm
West Coast
East Coast
Over the last 3 years, Gustave Carlson has journeyed around the fishhook coast of Cape Cod, Massachusetts and across Northern California’s wind-swept Point Reyes (Punta de los Reyes, the “Cape of Kings”) in search of Heirloom Barns and Forgotten Houses. See what he found in the time and distance between two red barns at Mercury 20 Gallery in Oakland, CA, April 25 to May 31, 2025.
Barn Separation
Point Reyes Station, CA
24 x 36 $2000 framed Buy
2022
612 Commercial Street
Provincetown, MA
16 x 16 $1000 framed Buy
2023
Bradford Street House Study with Cellar Door
Provincetown, MA
16 x 20 $1200 framed Buy
2024
Paine Hollow Road House
Wellfleet, MA
36 x 36 $2500 framed Buy
2024
Provincetown Beach Shack Provincetown, MA
16 x 20 $1200 framed Buy
2024
Alder Road Bolinas Beach Shacks
Bolinas Beach, CA
30 x 40 $2500 framed Buy
2024
Launch For Hire
Inverness CA
30 x 40 $2500 framed Buy
2025
West Marin Barn
Point Reyes Station, CA
16 x 16 $1000 framed Buy
2025
House on B Street Study No. 2
Point Reyes Station, CA
16 x 16 $1000 framed Buy
2025
House on Shore Road
Truro, MA
16 x 16 $1000 framed Buy
2025
Point Reyes Barn
Point Reyes Station, CA
30 x40 $2500 framed Buy
2025
Red Barn Study No. 1 Bear Valley Road
Point Reyes Station, CA
18 x 24 $1500 framed Buy
2025
Interested in purchasing a painting shown at Heirloom Barns Forgotten Houses?
Paintings can be purchased through Mercury 20 Gallery in-person or online.
Founded in 2006, Mercury 20 is a contemporary art gallery established, supported and operated by San Francisco Bay Area artists. Mercury 20 maintains a gallery space in Oakland, CA as well as an online sales platform. A collective operating structure supports the ability to experiment, develop, exhibit, advance work and sustain the arts community.
About the Show
Gustave Carlson's body of work is a profound exploration of the agricultural landscape, with a particular emphasis on barns, agrarian vernacular, beach cottages, and fields. His studies derive from the picturesque coastlines of Cape Cod, Massachusetts, and Point Reyes, California.
In Carlson's paintings, one encounters a blend of the familiar and the enigmatic. His acute awareness of building shapes and perspectives, coupled with his commitment to landscape stewardship, positions his work as a form of documentation. Carlson's perception of the landscape as a blanket or wallpaper that envelops the surface is vividly translated into his art. His depictions of forgotten farmhouse forms and heirloom barns evoke themes of decay, architectural typology, nostalgia, and distinctive color harmonies. Notably, the chairs in his paintings serve as metaphoric representations of the human figure.
Carlson's technique is marked by a juxtaposition of thick, layered applications and thin, underdeveloped areas. Engaging in the simultaneous creation of multiple paintings, Carlson allows for the emergence and overlay of earlier forms, resulting in a palimpsest-like effect known as pentimento. This nuanced interplay between presence and absence is a cornerstone of his artistic comfort zone.
A hallmark of Carlson's oeuvre is his iterative process of revisiting and transforming his works, continually altering shapes and colors until he achieves a cohesive body of work. His practice is profoundly influenced by luminaries such as Richard Diebenkorn, Lois Dodd, Wayne Thiebaud, and Fairfield Porter, whose impact is evident in the contemplative and dynamic nature of his paintings.