Invented Landscapes
Invented Landscapes
Francis Cook Gallery is pleased to present Invented Landscapes, a group exhibition that brings together recent works by Tucker Love, Liam Murphy-Torres, and Sutton Allen—three emerging painters whose practices explore the boundary between observation and invention. Though their approaches diverge in tone and technique, each artist engages with the landscape—not as a backdrop, but as a generative force for memory, structure, and imagination.
Tucker Love constructs quiet, atmospheric scenes of paths, houses, and tree lines that feel at once remembered and dreamed. Working in the modernist figurative tradition, Love’s ongoing series of imagined landscapes investigates the tension between perception and memory, merging references to Sienese painting and expressionist figuration with a contemporary painterly sensibility. With a restrained palette and rhythmic compositions, Love treats the motif of the winding path as a metaphor for introspection and the passage of time.
Liam Murphy-Torres, by contrast, populates his landscapes with people. Parks and public spaces—filtered through a distinctly urban sensibility—become stages for fleeting encounters and formal play. Informed by Cézanne, Matisse, and modernist abstraction, his paintings hover between figuration and invention. A pink sky, a balloon, a crouched figure under a tree—these details are handled with painterly care but also a willingness to distort, flatten, and reimagine. Murphy-Torres gives us the emotional weight of lived experience, not by narrating it directly but by bending space and color into its likeness.
Where Love and Murphy-Torres gesture toward the natural and social worlds, Sutton Allen turns his attention to the built environment—specifically, the overlooked signage and structural forms of city life. Steam pipes, mailboxes, traffic cones, and lampposts are rendered with a quiet monumentality. Through a gradual reduction of space and deepening focus on shape and line, Allen transforms urban ephemera into enduring forms. His paintings chart a path from representation to symbol, asking us to consider how familiar structures might carry new meaning when reorganized in paint.
Together, these three painters offer visions of places that are rooted in real experience but not bound by it. Invented Landscapes is less about topography and more about sensibility—how an artist shapes the world through color, memory, and form. Whether evoking the hush of dusk, the electricity of a public park, or the strange clarity of urban signage, each painting in the exhibition invites us to dwell in a world not as it is, but as it might be felt, remembered, or remade.
Presented by Francis Cook Gallery at the Saint Kate Arts Hotel
Milwaukee, WI | Summer 2025
Location
139 E Kilbourn Ave, Milwaukee, WI 53202, United States
Open
July 18, 2025 - October 14, 2025
Opening Reception
Friday, July 18, 2025 6:00 - 8:00 P.M.