Installation view of No Swans at Josh Lilley, presenting Timothy Lai

Timothy Lai

No Swans

13 March – 15 April 2026

Josh Lilley is proud to present No Swans, an exhibition of new work by Providence based painter Timothy Lai (b. 1987, Kota Bharu, Kelantan, Malaysia).

The landscape around Lai’s home has been the chief source of inspiration for this series of paintings executed across the past autumn and winter. Salter Grove Memorial Park conjoins the bluntly named Marsh Island and Rock Island there, two crescent jetties cradling small coves along the Providence River. Each island’s banks rise low out of the water, bordered by boulders and reeds, ensnaring dawn cobwebs and framing views of local waterfowl. Beyond the arcing boundary of the jetties, freight ships chug by on their daily deliveries beneath a low sky. You can see the weather coming in from that vantage point and weigh up the time left before the turn back to home.

Lai walks there, sometimes by himself, or with his wife and dog. The settings for his paintings are all drawn from life, but a given picture’s success in his eyes is measured by it’s capacity to develop autonomy and graduate from memory into imagination. For Lai, the landscape and his home are stages for projection, familiar places to facilitate a transition into the curious uncertainty of a rich inner world. His routine forms a daily ritual wherein he can contemplate the relationships and environments at the centre of his being before beginning an exploration of them in paint.

There is an architecture to Lai’s compositions, an accretion of meditatively applied, short marks that build the structure of the image. They’re layered alongside longer, fluid gestures and dragged, dry-brush striations, achieving a sensation of both solidity and reverie- an environment in flux. There is an earthiness to the base of his expansive palette, a grounded bedrock that spirals out into vivid illumination. A closer inspection of his surfaces reveals hues that may present as incongruous in principle, but harmonise amidst the sheer variety of mark and tone. Lai’s range of application entails his paintings arrive at two speeds; their ferocity balanced by their steady consideration. The immediacy of their atmospheric light and dynamic brushwork gives way to the underlying stillness and emotional sensitivity at the heart of each scene.

The subjects and stages in Lai’s paintings draw from the legacy of suburban longing found in the work of American painters Edward Hopper and Andrew Wyeth, as much as the architectural liminalism of European modernists Giorgio de Chirico and Yves Tanguy. They are loaded with presence with or without figures. The animals that inhabit his pictures are familiars, vessels for the drives of the human protagonists and totems for their contemplation. The recurring motif of the swan implies an unknowable or unreachable character, elegant and aloof. It’s presence as a foil is emblematic of the yearning within Lai’s work, a desire for connection, intimacy and understanding.