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    Home»Artist»Kimberly McGuiness: Where Symbol and Silence Collide
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    Kimberly McGuiness: Where Symbol and Silence Collide

    ArtWireBy ArtWireApril 21, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    The Oracle of Liriax
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    Some artists paint what they see. Kimberly McGuiness paints what’s felt—what floats just beneath the surface of awareness. Her work isn’t about explaining things. It’s about reminding you that you already know. That somewhere in your chest, or your gut, or maybe just behind your eyes, you’ve carried that truth all along.

    Kimberly’s art sits at the edge of reality and myth. There’s a strong pull toward the natural world—its colors, its creatures, its wild rhythms—but also toward stories that come from somewhere older. Her pieces don’t just show you a horse or a peacock or a mythic figure—they carry a mood, a pause, a question that doesn’t need an answer. Her interest in circus magic, mythology, and animal symbolism folds easily into her work. These aren’t random themes—they’re connected through feeling. And feeling is where she paints from.

    You can see it clearly in her piece Liriax.

    The Oracle of Liriax

    Liriax: Oracle of the Realm of Silent Knowing

    Liriax isn’t loud. There’s no shout or flash. She’s quiet, but not empty. The kind of quiet that buzzes with meaning.

    The painting introduces us to a presence. Not quite human, not quite divine. Liriax lives in a place McGuiness calls “the Realm of Silent Knowing”—a space outside of speech, outside of logic. Here, answers come in color, shape, and sensation. It’s not what Liriax says that matters—it’s what she reflects back.

    Her face is built from layers. You see ancient patterns, echoes of symbols, textures like cloth and bone and starlight. She’s not young, but she’s not old either. She belongs to time, but also steps outside of it. Her eyes hold that kind of weight. Not heavy—but infinite. It’s as if you’re not just looking at her, but through her. Or maybe she’s looking through you.

    McGuiness doesn’t spell things out. She gives you a mood and trusts you to feel your way into it. The curve of a line, the tilt of a jaw, the color that’s almost blue but not quite—these are the pieces she uses to tell you something. And it’s never just one thing.

    What stands out is how Liriax becomes a mirror. She’s not delivering answers like some oracle from mythology. She’s holding up a version of you that already knows the answer—you just haven’t said it out loud yet.


    The Pause Between Thoughts

    What McGuiness taps into with Liriax is something rare. She creates work that feels intentional without feeling rigid. It moves like breath. The pauses are as full as the brushstrokes. You don’t just view the piece—you sit with it. And it sits with you.

    There’s a tenderness to how McGuiness handles this subject. She doesn’t force the narrative. She doesn’t box Liriax in with over-definition. The character remains fluid, intuitive. You can’t reduce her to a single meaning. That’s the point. Meaning here is layered, lived-in, and deeply personal.

    And this isn’t just about one painting. It’s how McGuiness approaches art in general. There’s no interest in bombast. Her work offers quiet intensity, not spectacle. Even when she draws on circus magic—a world of performance, dazzle, and bright lights—it’s the in-between moments she captures. The hush just before the curtain rises. The breath before the leap.


    What Kimberly McGuiness Gives Us

    Kimberly McGuiness doesn’t scream for your attention. She opens a door, nods once, and waits to see if you’ll step through. Her work respects the viewer’s intelligence and emotional life. She’s not here to tell you what to feel. She’s here to say: you already feel it—let’s sit with that for a while.

    Her fascination with horses, peacocks, circus themes, and mythic figures isn’t decorative. These elements are rooted in symbol and memory. They hold weight. They come with stories we may not even know we’re carrying until we see them reflected back in a piece like Liriax.

    This is not about explanation. It’s about recognition.

    And that’s the real gift of her work—it reminds you that you don’t always need words to know something. Sometimes, the clearest truths are the ones you feel, not the ones you say.

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