MILAN.- Massimo De Carlo starts the New Year with an exhibition by Swiss artist Olivier Mosset, based in Tucson Arizona, with whom Massimo De Carlo has collaborated for 30 years, since 1987.
Olivier Mosset is well known for his minimalist practice that investigates conceptual abstraction through painting. The artist explores a variety of monochrome colour blocks, surfaces, geometrical patterns, dimensions via methodical repetition of gestures and a radical approach to the canvas; removed from any type of subjectivity.
The exhibition is structured as a small retrospective, where the artist has selected a number of works from different periods of his career. The iconic circle oil paintings (here from the 1970s), which are part of a series of 200 identical canvases that Mosset produced between 1966 and 1974 and epitomize his radical approach to art making, are shown alongside a new body of work, created for this exhibition: four large-scale thought-provoking black monochromes that continue the artists exploration of the relationship between void and ego.
A series of monumental works from the first exhibition Olivier Mosset had at Massimo De Carlos first gallery space in Milan in 1987 illustrate the artists investigation of scale and painterly gesture. Here the artist uses a colour palette composed by lightshades and nightshades to create immanent canvases that convey Olivier Mossets discussions around authorship and the role of the artist as a maker, cherished by the minimalist 1960s Paris based collective BMPT (which Mosset was a founder of) that also included Daniel Buren, Michel Parmentier, and Niele Toroni.
Repetition and object-hood are key theme for Olivier Mossets as he questions the function of paintings. The 1988 white and light blue rectangular surfaces GLSNST and CNVRS and the burning orange canvases (2002) render tangible use of repetition of minimal geometrical forms, gestures and patterns that are essential in order for the artist to ban subjectivity of the work.
Combining playfulness with austere rigour Olivier Mossets practice creates auto sufficient paintings that exist for themselves; the viewer is subsequently allowed to look at these vast colourful surfaces and observe for as long as they want the canvases, looking into what they decide to look into. With this exhibition Olivier Mosset once again masters not only painting but also the creation of unprecedented ways of seeing.