BERLIN.- Capitain Petzel is presenting Christopher Kulendran Thomas solo exhibition, on view from 11 June 2025.
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The exhibition consists of one monumental painting and three small works on glass that algorithmically metabolize the colonial art history that came to dominate in Sri Lanka after the artists family, who are Tamil, left escalating ethnic violence in the country. The big painting, which gives the exhibition its title, spans the entirety of the exhibition space. The composition is densely packed with bodies emerging from, and fading into, a dark forest. Distinctions between figure and environment and between creation and destruction are almost indistinguishable. This new painting, the artists largest to date, raises questions that are particularly urgent in the aftermath of conflict and erasure: Which histories are rendered visible? Who holds the authority to narrate them? And how are images mobilized to shape memory?
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Kulendran Thomas practice subtly seeds doubt into the ideas of authorship, freedom, and cultural legitimacy that have long structured artistic value. Where a violent history remains undocumented, algorithmically generated images serve as blueprints. Rather than painting that contested history from documentary evidence, Kulendran Thomas instead imagines it through an engagement with the visual language of the colonial history that led to that violence a visual language often seen as synonymous with artistic freedom but also deployed as part of broader ideological campaigns of soft power.
Like all of Kulendran Thomas paintings, the works presented here are composed using a neural network trained on the work of successive generations of Sri Lankas most celebrated artists influenced by the European modernisms brought to the island by colonial settlers. Embodying the Western idea of the individual that is encoded into that canon, layered hybrid compositions uncannily familiar and yet alien are brought to life through deliberate brushwork, with painterly gestures that slip across art historical timelines. The many stages of this complex process, done collaboratively with the artists studio team in Berlin, reanimate the digital fragments with a very human tactility.
Here, the painting is a contested document: both a cultural artifact shaped by art history and an engagement with the political, technological, and aesthetic forces that have contributed to its construction. Spanning not only painting but also video and installation, Kulendran Thomas practice subverts the essentialist ideas at the core of identity politics the kind of politics that ripped apart the artists family homeland. Merging automation and authorship, Kulendran Thomas exhibition questions the stability and legitimacy of both. His paintings do not seek a singular cultural voice but operate through hybridity and tension, reflecting a diasporic condition of fractured belonging.
Christopher Kulendran Thomas paintings are held in significant public collections, like that of the Museum of Modern Art in New York, and have been exhibited in the artists recent solo exhibitions at FACT, Liverpool (2025); WIELS, Brussels (2024); Kunsthalle Zürich (2023); KW Institute for Contemporary Art, Berlin (2022); and Institute of Contemporary Arts, London (2022).
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