Michelle Silver is a painter and curator in the Hudson Valley, NY

current exhibition

What She Builds, She Must Destroy

Solo exhibition by Michelle Silver
June 14 - August 10, 2025
Distortion Society, 155 Main Street, Beacon, NY

Show Review

“In the opening lines of the Iliad, Homer invokes the feminine with the words “Rage—Goddess, sing the rage,” and thus begins his thundering epic. Infused with a sense of Homerian rage, What She Builds, She Must Destroy at Distortion Society highlights a series of robust crimson-hued paintings by gallery director Michelle Silver. This solo show of her recent work wrangles concepts of motherhood, feminine power, and pleasure as reflected in these muscular works that seem to battle with themselves. With “The Unraveling” (2025) as a prime example, a swirl of fiery red gestures harmonizes in a metaphorical ecstatic dance, each painterly rhythm morphing into the next. In “Holding Pattern” (2025), we see the painter herself — pregnant, leaning forward, and returning our gaze — immersed in quasi-Impressionist environs, while “The Dancer” (2024) throws us further into a beautifully chaotic disarray of pure abstract frenzy.” - Taliesin Thomas for Hyperallergic

Press

  • Featured exhibition in Hyperallergic’s “10 Art Shows to See in Upstate New York This July” Read the article →

  • Featured photo and mention in Cool Hunting’s article “Upstate Art Weekend 2025 Expands to Include over 155 Participants” Read the article →

  • Spotlight interview on Upstate Art Weekend’s newsletter and website Read the interview →

  • Included in Two Coats of Paint June Gallery Guide See the guide →

  • Featured article “The Pain and Joy of Parenting” in the Highlands Current Read the article →

This June, Distortion Society presents What She Builds, She Must Destroy, a solo exhibition of new paintings by Gallery Director Michelle Silver. Through a mix of figurative painting and gestural abstraction, Silver explores the contradictions inherent in motherhood: the tension between creation and destruction, restriction and permission, duty and desire. She questions traditional narratives around child-rearing, societal expectations, and maternal guilt while asking: does a mother have the power, the right, to destroy what she builds?

Completed in the past year but marking specific moments from the seven years since her first child was born, Silver’s paintings present a pictorial manifesto for coming into maternal power, an ideal version of herself that she has not yet fully surrendered to. Here, we see the archetype of Mother not as a martyr, but as a free-thinking, spirited, fallible beast. She is the owner of her pleasure and her emotional and intellectual promiscuity. She acknowledges the violence of childbirth, the visceral destruction of her body and mind, and harnesses this pain as her power. The Mother gives love, holds discomfort, and heals wounds. She defiantly confronts chaos and asserts herself, even when female rage makes people uncomfortable–“it is not becoming of her,” they say. To this, the Mother smiles and unleashes a guttural howl, unfurling the beast inside her.

In What She Builds, She Must Destroy, Silver’s brushstrokes are an extension of that archetypal Mother’s scream. She paints womanhood and motherhood in all its ugliness and glory. Frantic strokes and fiery shades engulf her figures while indiscernible forms collide on the canvas. She builds up her canvases over time, layering paint sometimes to the point of overworking, necessitating a complete act of destruction—smeared paint, violent strokes, and an element of surprise—to bring the work to completion. Silver’s paintings do not offer resolution or redemption, instead they insist on being lived in, wrestled with, and metabolized.

Read press release →

View exhibition checklist →

Interview filmed + produced by Carmine Iallonardo / Of the Mountain Media