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About Painting III
Rolando Anselmi is thrilled to announce the opening of About Painting II, a group exhibition that –
by echoing last year’s About Painting – aims to present an articulate overview that explores
contemporary painting.
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Rolando Anselmi is thrilled to announce the opening of About Painting II, a group exhibition that –
by echoing last year’s About Painting - aims to present an articulate overview that explores
contemporary painting. The relevance of this medium is examined through the work of nine
internationa lartists who, diverse in their approaches and techniques, have been invited to exhibit
their personal understanding of the medium itself and to expand the conventional debate around
the notion of painting.This third chapter will feature works by Ana Cláudia Almeida (b. 1993, BR),
Li Gang (b.1986, CN), Matthew Hansel (b.1977, USA), Olivia Hill (b. 1985, USA), Andrea Respino
(b. 1976, ITA), Paul Rouphail (b. 1987, USA), Carla Santana (b. 1995, BR), Vincenzo Schillaci (b.
1984, ITA), Georgia-May Travers Cook (b. 1995, UK).
The exhibition sets off with Paul Rouphail’s Hothouse Flowers: a still life painting enveloped by a
warm light coming through the grates of a window. In his works relatable everyday settings
intertwine with surreal and purposedly conflicting elements. Matthew Hansel follows up with The
Study and Night Swimming. Employing both humour and pathos together, the Brooklyn native
creates classical images from art history which overlap with the grotesque, withdrawn from our
collective subconscious. Ana Cláudia Almeida seeks intersections between time, landscapes and
action: the brazilian’s paintings feature the juxtaposition of surfaces colours and lines, suggesting
a continuous flow. Tactile and materic elements are pivotal to Carla Santana’s Freático and
Miragem. Their motives are shaped by the accumulation process of clay and natural pigments and
they hark back to primordial figures. The lower floor is welcomed by two works from Olivia Hill’s
Oceanfront Property series. Her landscapes are a mixture of real and imaginary places which
portray the bright coast of southern California. Human figures are not visible, yet man’s influence
is all over the canvas, revealing harmonies and discords of man’s relationship with nature.
Undefined and unsettling scenaries characterise Andrea Respino’s artistic production: in
Infastidite Acque V and Le Calde Correnti the pencil traits occur as uninterrupted fluxes with
turbulent motion, creating a pattern of discrepancies which give life to a dreamlike environment
where every element is almost an extension of the figure. In Li Gang’s Bottom Color series it is
highlighted the complicated link between materiality, emotion and essence of painting: this corpus
of works consists of a number of paintings realised with handmade red clay pigments, which
suggest a visual jargon halfway through figuration and abstraction. Vincenzo Schillaci’s first round
format work, Di Età Acerba, combines different layers of pictorial matter which form a varied
impasto. Thanks to this technique resulting into shady colour fields he achieves a “nonrepresentation” of visions always resurfacing but never fully in focus. Piling on material after
material Schillaci brings to life psychological landscapes overfilling the borders of the wooden
board. Georgia-May Travers Cook is at the end of the exhibition path: in The crime and The Movie
in my Mind there is an evident blend between realistic figuration and an unsettling but potentially
surreal aesthetic which is typical of her work. Stories portrayed never lose their objective status
but leave room for interpretation.
by echoing last year’s About Painting - aims to present an articulate overview that explores
contemporary painting. The relevance of this medium is examined through the work of nine
internationa lartists who, diverse in their approaches and techniques, have been invited to exhibit
their personal understanding of the medium itself and to expand the conventional debate around
the notion of painting.This third chapter will feature works by Ana Cláudia Almeida (b. 1993, BR),
Li Gang (b.1986, CN), Matthew Hansel (b.1977, USA), Olivia Hill (b. 1985, USA), Andrea Respino
(b. 1976, ITA), Paul Rouphail (b. 1987, USA), Carla Santana (b. 1995, BR), Vincenzo Schillaci (b.
1984, ITA), Georgia-May Travers Cook (b. 1995, UK).
The exhibition sets off with Paul Rouphail’s Hothouse Flowers: a still life painting enveloped by a
warm light coming through the grates of a window. In his works relatable everyday settings
intertwine with surreal and purposedly conflicting elements. Matthew Hansel follows up with The
Study and Night Swimming. Employing both humour and pathos together, the Brooklyn native
creates classical images from art history which overlap with the grotesque, withdrawn from our
collective subconscious. Ana Cláudia Almeida seeks intersections between time, landscapes and
action: the brazilian’s paintings feature the juxtaposition of surfaces colours and lines, suggesting
a continuous flow. Tactile and materic elements are pivotal to Carla Santana’s Freático and
Miragem. Their motives are shaped by the accumulation process of clay and natural pigments and
they hark back to primordial figures. The lower floor is welcomed by two works from Olivia Hill’s
Oceanfront Property series. Her landscapes are a mixture of real and imaginary places which
portray the bright coast of southern California. Human figures are not visible, yet man’s influence
is all over the canvas, revealing harmonies and discords of man’s relationship with nature.
Undefined and unsettling scenaries characterise Andrea Respino’s artistic production: in
Infastidite Acque V and Le Calde Correnti the pencil traits occur as uninterrupted fluxes with
turbulent motion, creating a pattern of discrepancies which give life to a dreamlike environment
where every element is almost an extension of the figure. In Li Gang’s Bottom Color series it is
highlighted the complicated link between materiality, emotion and essence of painting: this corpus
of works consists of a number of paintings realised with handmade red clay pigments, which
suggest a visual jargon halfway through figuration and abstraction. Vincenzo Schillaci’s first round
format work, Di Età Acerba, combines different layers of pictorial matter which form a varied
impasto. Thanks to this technique resulting into shady colour fields he achieves a “nonrepresentation” of visions always resurfacing but never fully in focus. Piling on material after
material Schillaci brings to life psychological landscapes overfilling the borders of the wooden
board. Georgia-May Travers Cook is at the end of the exhibition path: in The crime and The Movie
in my Mind there is an evident blend between realistic figuration and an unsettling but potentially
surreal aesthetic which is typical of her work. Stories portrayed never lose their objective status
but leave room for interpretation.
21
ottobre 2023
About Painting III
Dal 21 ottobre al 22 dicembre 2023
arte contemporanea
Location
Galerie Rolando Anselmi | Roma
Roma, Via di Tor Fiorenza, 16, (RM)
Roma, Via di Tor Fiorenza, 16, (RM)
Orario di apertura
Da mercoledì a sabato 15-19
Sito web
Autore