PARIS.- Three years after his last exhibition, Gérard Garouste is returning to
Galerie Templon with Contes ineffables (Unspeakable Tales). The new exhibition journeys into the world of myths and fables, a voyage the artist uses to evoke universal questions such as our relationship to time, other people and knowledge.
Following on from his exploration of Goethes Faust in 2011, with these new works Gérard Garouste has chosen not to confine himself to a single subject: paintings, gouaches and sculptures are given a dreamlike structure, their underlying logic rooted in unpredictable currents that create an effect of ambiguity which provides the exhibition with its main theme. The artist is suggesting that knowledge is enriched by means of a two-tiered interpretation, based on what reason tells us and on what our eyes tell, a process wherein we are necessarily guided by our imagination.
These subliminal images, built of reminiscences and associations between ideas, contain a panoply of references, from Tintin and Snowy in Hergés comics to the Talmud, La Fontaines fables and Ashkenazi legends, from Don Quixote and Faust to art history, Grünewald, Millet and romantic landscapes.
The artist endows the protagonists of his works with the features of his nearest and dearest as well as his own features. He takes on a variety of roles in his numerous self-portraits: the invalid, the biblical hero, a mysterious animal. These visions mirror the autobiographical narrative the painter constructed in 2009 with LIntranquille : Autoportrait dun fils, dun peintre, dun fou.
The works are hung in the manner of an installation, suggesting the affinities that flow between the pieces, from Saint Hubert to Rabbin et loiseau, Jonas à lAne au crépuscule and Prince Valet to Cigares du pharaon. Contes ineffables pulls together the fragments of a disjointed mind, thus charting a mental journey that will vanish once the exhibition is over.
Born in 1946, Gérard Garouste lives and works in Normandy and Paris. One of the most popular French artists of his generation, he occupies a unique position in the international art world.
During the 1970s, dominated by conceptual forms of expression, he made the daring choice of creating a timeless figurative painting style. Gérard Garouste draws on the old masters and ancient texts for inspiration, an approach that allows him to then re-examine the great myths: the Bible, The Divine Comedy, Gargantua and Don Quixote. According to Michel Onfray, this approach makes him perhaps the most modern of all.
He has been represented since the 1980s by leading American dealer Leo Castelli. His work has been shown worldwide (USA, Japan, Germany, Latin America and Italy) and can be found in many major public collections, including Paris' Musée national dart moderneCentre Georges Pompidou and Musée dArt Moderne de la Ville de Paris, and the Ludwig Museum in Vienna. In 2009, the Villa Medicis in Rome held a major retrospective of his work, entitled Le Classique et lIndien. In 2013, his monumental bronze sculpture, Le Défi du Soleil, was on display at the Saint-Cloud park just outside Paris. The artist also recently took part in the landmark exhibition Les aventures de la vérité at Fondation Maeght in St-Paul.