HONG KONG.- Gagosian is presenting a series of new paintings in watercolor on canvas by Albert Oehlen, his first exhibition in Asia.
Oehlen approaches painting as a perceptual challenge, a puzzle set within the unpredictable arena of the picture plane. He often imposes specific rules or limitations on his workkeeping to a certain palette or beginning with a straight lineas a way to interrogate the infinite possibilities that the act of painting presents. By continuously flipping between chaos and control, he opens up new relationships between pictorial space, color, and gesture.
In these new paintings, Oehlen emphasizes the importance of spontaneity within his artistic method. Diverging from his recent works created with oil or lacquer on aluminum or the aluminum composite Dibond, Oehlens decision to use watercolor in this series marks a stylistic return to his hazy, blended, almost impressionistic oil paintings dating from 2016 and earlier.
Oehlen begins with a chalky white ground, across which he flicks and stains splashes of fluid color. Hues dart between canvases: the same intense shade of magentaa color he previously referred to as hysterical in the context of his Tree Paintings (201316)meanders snakelike from painting to painting, puncturing through the murky veil of watercolors in a vivid streak before resurfacing elsewhere as a series of dots peppered down the canvas. Oehlen revels in the dynamism of his lines, allowing them to come to life and dictate each twist of his ever-shifting compositions.
Nevertheless, Oehlens frenzied brushstrokes are tempered by moments of painterly control. Interspersed between splotches and swipes of color are lines, curves, and gradients, all delineated with satisfying uniformity. While his paintings initially appear to lack geometric regularity, they are in fact filled with clean-cut right anglesincluding a recurring L-shaped motif, which recalls the artists yellow-and-black paintings from his 2018 exhibition SEXE, RELIGION, POLITIQUE. These forceful right anglesalong with rectangular window-like apertures and eerie humanoid formsare enshrouded deep within the canvas, their watery facture only adding to their frustrating, tantalizing ephemerality. Swallowed up by the slashes of pigment surrounding them, these loose strands of figuration ultimately dissipate within a churning whirlwind of colors.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a fully illustrated catalogue with a text by art historian Christian Malycha.
An exhibition of Oehlens work curated by Hans Ulrich Obrist will open at the Serpentine Galleries in London on October 2, 2019.