Grace Bromley | Show Me What I Don’t Know

July 12 - August 30, 2025

Salgueiro: Clarice, this is a question from a journalist: “You’re an intuitive. So how do you deal
with the supernatural in your life?”

Lispector: What’s natural is supernatural, too. Don’t think that it’s very far off. What’s natural is
already a mystery.

Megan Mulrooney is pleased to present Show Me What I Don’t Know, an exhibition of new paintings and a sculpture by Grace Bromley. This will be her first solo show with the gallery and will be on view from July 12 – August 30, 2025.

Across mid- to large-scale canvases, Bromley stages familiar interiors – bedrooms, hallways, the corners of rooms – as sites of psychological charge and transformation. Working with thinned paint and soft rags rather than brushes, she builds each composition through a process of slow accumulation and removal. This layering, revision, and restraint mirrors the emotional atmosphere of the paintings themselves: forms hover into visibility before receding again, yielding images that feel as if they are holding something in place even as it slips away. Curtains conceal as often as they frame; flooded floors reflect light without revealing a source; beds appear recently vacated, but it’s unclear by whom.

“These spaces hold the residue of presence without explicitly depicting the figure,” Bromley writes. “With this work, I’m asking the viewer to sit with me in uncertainty.” The figures may be absent, but their imprint lingers. The paintings evoke a kind of spectral return – what Bromley describes as the feeling of being “a ghost in your old life, unable to fully re-inhabit something you’ve left behind. There’s no space carved out for you anymore; it’s already changed shape.”

Bromley draws from fiction, theater, and classic fairy tales as loose scaffolding, using them less as narrative sources than as formal and psychological cues. She’s particularly interested in figures who defy expected scripts: the Princess who detects the pea beneath her tower of mattresses, the wife who opens Bluebeard’s forbidden door. These references aren’t depicted so much as diffused through the work’s internal logic, where beds become emblems of emotional resistance as much as rest, and doorways serve as thresholds between the unknown and the unknown.

The exhibition’s sole sculptural work, I Remember Anyway, functions as a kind of anchor to the surrounding paintings. A table and two chairs – with exaggeratedly sharp legs – are draped in a painter’s cloth, suggesting a dinner, a séance, or furniture left covered to protect it from time. Scratched faintly into the tabletop is the outline of a theater, revealed only through a light rubbing of graphite. The work references a childhood memory: Bromley and her sister were allowed to etch secrets and drawings into their kitchen table – one piece of furniture their grandmother permitted them to “ruin.” Here, the table becomes a kind of reliquary, a structure for memory, grief, and the desire to connect with what’s already gone.

Grace Bromley (b. 1994, Park Ridge, IL; lives and works in Richmond, VA) holds an MFA from Virginia Commonwealth University and a BFA from The School of The Art Institute of Chicago. Her work has been featured in group exhibitions at Zepster, New York, NY; Steven Zevitas Gallery, Boston, MA; Jack Barrett Gallery, New York, NY; Mariam Cramer Projects, Amsterdam, NL; LBF Contemporary London, UK; D.D.D.D. Pictures, New York, NY; among others.

 

  • Grace Bromley Vanity Table, 2025 Oil on canvas 60 x 72 in 152.4 x 182.9 cm (GBR25.010)

    Grace Bromley

    Vanity Table, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    60 x 72 in
    152.4 x 182.9 cm
    (GBR25.010)

  • Grace Bromley Blue Room, 2025  Oil on canvas  70 x 80 in 177.8 x 203.2 cm  (GBR25.003)

    Grace Bromley

    Blue Room, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    70 x 80 in
    177.8 x 203.2 cm
    (GBR25.003)

  • Grace Bromley Closing Act , 2025 Oil on canvas 60 x 64 in 152.4 x 162.6 cm (GBR25.008)

    Grace Bromley

    Closing Act , 2025
    Oil on canvas
    60 x 64 in
    152.4 x 162.6 cm
    (GBR25.008)

  • Grace Bromley Flood, 2025 Oil on canvas 72 x 60 in 182.9 x 152.4 cm (GBR25.011)

    Grace Bromley

    Flood, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    72 x 60 in
    182.9 x 152.4 cm
    (GBR25.011)

  • Grace Bromley The Danger of Stirring up Hidden Things , 2025 Oil on canvas 70 x 64 in 177.8 x 162.6 cm (GBR25.014)

    Grace Bromley

    The Danger of Stirring up Hidden Things , 2025
    Oil on canvas
    70 x 64 in
    177.8 x 162.6 cm
    (GBR25.014)

  •   Grace Bromley Show Me What I Don't Know , 2025 Oil on canvas 60 x 48 in 152.4 x 121.9 cm (GBR25.012)

    Grace Bromley

    Show Me What I Don't Know , 2025
    Oil on canvas
    60 x 48 in
    152.4 x 121.9 cm
    (GBR25.012)

  • Grace Bromley Closing Act , 2025 Oil on canvas 60 x 64 in 152.4 x 162.6 cm (GBR25.008)

    Grace Bromley

    Pieces of a Wasted Hour , 2025
    Oil on canvas
    72 x 64 in
    182.9 x 162.6 cm
    (GBR25.013)

  • Grace Bromley The Shape We're In, 2025 Oil on Canvas 64 x 70 in 162.6 x 177.8 cm (GBR25.016)

    Grace Bromley

    The Shape We're In, 2025
    Oil on Canvas
    64 x 70 in
    162.6 x 177.8 cm
    (GBR25.016)

  • Grace Bromley Hole in the Sky , 2025 Oil on canvas 80 x 70 in 203.2 x 177.8 cm (GBR25.004)

    Grace Bromley

    Hole in the Sky , 2025
    Oil on canvas
    80 x 70 in
    203.2 x 177.8 cm
    (GBR25.004)

  •   Grace Bromley Opening Act , 2025 Oil on canvas 36 x 30 in 91.4 x 76.2 cm (GBR25.005)

    Grace Bromley

    Opening Act , 2025
    Oil on canvas
    36 x 30 in
    91.4 x 76.2 cm
    (GBR25.005)

  • Grace Bromley Veiled, 2025 Oil on canvas 30 x 36 in 76.2 x 91.4 cm (GBR25.002)

    Grace Bromley

    Veiled, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    30 x 36 in
    76.2 x 91.4 cm
    (GBR25.002)

  • Grace Bromley Violet Hour, 2025 Oil on canvas 40 x 40 in 101.6 x 101.6 cm (GBR25.006)

    Grace Bromley

    Violet Hour, 2025
    Oil on canvas
    40 x 40 in
    101.6 x 101.6 cm
    (GBR25.006)