Art Knowledge News
Ryan Mosley's First Major Solo Exhibition at Alison Jacques Gallery |
|
|
| Written by Brice Cardin |
| Wednesday, 27 January 2010 01:41 |
|
This exhibition develops Mosley's ongoing
fascination with the aesthetics and motifs of various chapters in the canon of
art history, whilst being faithful to a visual vocabulary entirely of his own
making. The Renaissance collages of Arcimboldo and Hogarth's morality tales,
Degas's dancers and Gauguin's exotic landscapes, Ensor's carnivalesque and the
coarse ebullience of Guston are among the differing images and cultural episodes
from which Mosley draws inspiration and to which he pays homage. Yet these
subversive stylistic echoes of past masters, which are very often blended on the
same canvas into dynamic art historical conversations, are not deployed simply
to offer an idiosyncratic gloss on eras and artists which intrigue Mosley.
Rather, they provide tools and contexts in which he can dramatise ad absurdum
his interests in form and the fluid diffusion of narrative, and construct
otherworldly scenarios and characters which are every bit as amusing, menacing,
likeable and bewildering as the world we inhabit. The singular images crafted by Mosley, works that range from the wondrous to the monstrous, often rest on the artistʼs transgressive attitude to the classical genres of painting. Still life, landscape, and portraiture collapse in on each other, as studies of shoes morph into human likenesses, and botanical renderings become strangely animated and threatening scenes. Mosleyʼs interest in the anthropomorphic potential in various forms and characters, from top hats to cacti, means that in spite of his often grotesque hybridities (which include limbs with afros and snakes in drag), a sincerely human presence is never far from the canvas. The paintings do not depict human experiences and histories, but suggest them through both the artistʼs own weird formal imaginings, and the carefully built up layers and softly defined fields of colour which contribute towards the viewerʼs hazy recognitions. The anatomical incongruities, material impossibilities and circumstantial unlikelihoods portrayed mean that often Mosleyʼs paintings cannot be said to be ʻofʼ anything specifically; instead they are paintings about the artistʼs concerns, as they irreverently probe the history and practice of painting, and playfully evoke the humour, terror and bafflement attendant on human existence. Ryan Mosley (b. 1980) trained at the University of Huddersfield and the Royal College of Art. Solo exhibitions include presentations at Regina Gallery, Moscow (2009) and Census, Engholm Engelhorn, Vienna (2008). Group shows include Newspeak: British Art Now, The State Hermitage Museum, St Petersburg (2009) and The Saatchi Gallery, London (2010); Jerwood Contemporary Painters, Jerwood Space, London (2009); and Make Believe, Concrete and Glass, London (2008). Mosley lives and works in London. Visit : http://www. Click on logo below to add this article to your favorite Social Website ~ |
Related Articles :


This exhibition develops Mosley's ongoing
fascination with the aesthetics and motifs of various chapters in the canon of
art history, whilst being faithful to a visual vocabulary entirely of his own
making. The Renaissance collages of Arcimboldo and Hogarth's morality tales,
Degas's dancers and Gauguin's exotic landscapes, Ensor's carnivalesque and the
coarse ebullience of Guston are among the differing images and cultural episodes
from which Mosley draws inspiration and to which he pays homage. Yet these
subversive stylistic echoes of past masters, which are very often blended on the
same canvas into dynamic art historical conversations, are not deployed simply
to offer an idiosyncratic gloss on eras and artists which intrigue Mosley.
Rather, they provide tools and contexts in which he can dramatise ad absurdum
his interests in form and the fluid diffusion of narrative, and construct
otherworldly scenarios and characters which are every bit as amusing, menacing,
likeable and bewildering as the world we inhabit. 
