ROUND COLOURS  - Galerie John Ferrère
ROUND COLOURS 

Berger & Berger, Elvire Bonduelle, Caroline Corbasson, Stephen Dean, Richard Gorman, Audrey Perzo, James Rielly, Gerrit Rietveld
June 8 – July 15, 2017

 

Caroline Corbasson, Ellipse de chute (bleu outre mer), 2017, pastel, variable dimensions.
Stephen Dean, Account, 2010, books, 230 x 16 x 12 cm.
Laurent P. Berger, Les couleurs du ciel (parisien et par temps découvert le 2 juillet 2016), Les couleurs du ciel (parisen et par temps découvert le 27 août 2016), Les couleurs du ciel (parisien et par temps découvert le 5 septembre 2016), 2016, acrylic paint on cardboard mounted on oak, 40 x 40 cm.
Gerrit Rietveld, Child’s wheelbarrow, 1923, wood, pigment, metal, 33 x 66 x 26,7 cm.

Laurent P. Berger, Les couleurs du ciel (parisien et par temps découvert le 2 juillet 2016), 2016, acrylic paint on cardboard mounted on oak, 40 x 40 cm.

Stephen Dean, Account, 2010, books, 230 x 16 x 12 cm.
Richard Gorman, Skeet Kan, Kool tilt, Kik Kan, 2017, oil on linen, 80 x 80 cm.
Stephen Dean, Target, 2010, uncoiled paper, 57 x 57 cm.
Stephen Dean, Target, 2010, uncoiled paper, 57 x 57 cm.

Audrey Perzo, 127 rue de Turenne, 2017, synthetic cotton stitched canvas, threaded rods, eyelets, 400 x 380 cm.

Elvire Bonduelle, Big black bush, 2016, acrylic on canvas, 146 x 114 cm.
Ensemble Grille – Buffet
, 2016, painted metal and moss coated with raw canvas, 145  x 85 x 75 cm.
Audrey Perzo, Canavarlar, 2016, cotton stitched canvas, 80 x 75 cm.
Audrey Perzo, Canavarlar, 2016, cotton stitched canvas, 80 x 75 cm.
Audrey Perzo, Canavar, 2016, cotton stitched canvas, 146 x 285 cm.
Elvire Bonduelle, Ensemble Grille – Buffet, 2016, painted metal and moss coated with raw canvas, 145  x 85 x 75 cm.
James Rielly, I’m also good at hiding, 2017, watercolour, 76 x 56 cm.
Richard Gorman, Blue Punk, 2017, oil on linen, 80 x 80 cm.
Klip Kan, 2017, oil on linen, 80 x 80 cm.
Audrey Perzo, Jean-Louis, 2016, cotton stiched canvas, eyelets, 250 x 450 cm.
James Rielly, I’m good at hiding, 2017, watercolour on paper, 76 x 56 cm.
Elvire Bonduelle, Rotating Painting #18 & Rotating Painting #11B, 2015, acrylic on canvas, 46 x 38 cm.

Berger&Berger
Elvire Bonduelle
Caroline Corbasson
Stephen Dean
Richard Gorman
Audrey Perzo
James Rielly
Gerrit Rietveld

In 1808, Johann Wolfgang von Goethe published Theory of Colours. This text renewed the discourse on colour, no longer framing it simply as a physics phenomenon, but as an actual physiological experience of its own. The German poet and chemist suggests we position the individual, the viewer, at the heart of his theory. He reflects on the human perception of colour, producing a number of links that rely on a broader pluridisciplinary approach to philosophy, natural history, acoustics, and even linguistics in order to establish the philosophy of aesthetics.

Whether it comes to reproducing Saussure’s process of measuring the exact blue of the sky, as is the case of the artistic duo Berger&Berger, or Caroline Corbasson’s elliptical lines that trace the fall and trajectory of celestial bodies, the physiological experience of colour serves as the galvanizing theme for this exhibition.

Elvire Bonduelle presents a series of rotating pictorial compositions, following a protocol tinged with humor. As she tests the viewer’s degree of attention towards her work, Bonduelle questions the act of painting as much as the act of viewing a painting.

Similarly, Audrey Perzo’s textile sculptures explore the possibilities of pictorial language through her use of large-scale industrial textiles. Systematically referring back to a concept typically expressed by language, her works constitute an attempt at formal expression freed from the constraints of words.

The intersection between education, play, and language recalls the De Stijl movement that theorized largely about the effect of form and colour on thought production. This brings to mind the educational toys imagined by the Dutch designer, Gerrit Rietveld. In Stephen Dean’s case, this exploration takes the form of a recomposition of familiar objects in order to underline their  intrinsic colorimetric properties. This demonstration of the Principles of Harmony and Contrast of Colours, and Their Applications to the Arts explored by Dean is also explored in the work of Richard Gorman, where a dynamic tension is created by the vibrant juxtaposition of large color swaths.

James Rielly’s watercolor portraits position the viewer inversely as the subject of observation, once again positioning the individual at the center of the chromatic experience.

As such, ROUND COLOURS puts forward nine international artists whose practices pursue this attempt at an anthropological approach to colour.