NEW YORK, NY.- Jill Newhouse Gallery presents 20 recent oil paintings on vellum by Gerard Mossé in his first solo exhibition since 2013. Mosse creates ethereal and evocative works fixated on light. The imagery is fundamentally abstract, comprised of deceptively simple shapes hovering in a neutral-toned, nondescript space. In the new works, dark monolithic forms are made to bulge dramatically by a band of burning white or yellow oil pigment, applied in multilayered rich impasto. Dark geometric shapes allude to boulders or earthen outcroppings, while the brilliant white bands are suggestive of the blazing sun, of moonbeams, a lighthouse beacon, or the primordial flame.
Mossés work has shifted over time from figurative to abstract as he explored questions about the nature of painting and the freeness of line, form, and color. Born in Casablanca, Gerard Mossé spent his childhood in Morocco and Marseilles before moving to Los Angeles at 16. He began his artistic career as a painter, but soon began working in other media as well. He apprenticed with the well known ceramicist Michael Frimkess before studying sculpture, painting, and drawing at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles. Mossé earned an MFA in painting at the Claremont Graduate School of Art in California, where he taught classes on contemporary art. In the 1990s, he also lectured at Hampshire College in Amherst on the relationship between art and philosophy. Mossé moved to New York in 1987, where he currently lives and works. He had his first solo exhibition in New York in 1991, and has been showing regularly since then in both solo shows and group exhibitions, from New York to Tokyo.
ABSTRACTION BASED IN ART HISTORY
As pointed out by David Ebony, Gerard Mossés art rests on art-historical foundations. The glowing candles in the work of de la Tour and Richter immediately come to mind, as do the cosmic light sources in Baroque painting, such as Apollos radiant halo in the Velázquezs 1630 masterpiece, Apollo in the Forge of Vulcan, in the Prado. French Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, especially works by Seurat, were among Mossés earliest passions, though his working method is more akin to Picasso's in the approach to art-making as an insular activity and a ritual process.
Mosses paintings depict forms which cry out for description. Totem-like, sometimes anthropomorphic, but certainly architectonic, these images suggest the monoliths of Stonehenge burning with ethereal light. In the most recent works, such as Paper Painting E7 and Paper Painting F17, the brooding rectangular forms are tinged with color, and backlit, giving off a prismatic glow. The images-though unearthly-remain tethered to reality and to nature. Mosses art exists in a singular realm, somewhere between the empirical and the mythological. Rather than a depiction of reflected light, Mossés spellbinding paintings do, indeed, appear to project light. They illuminate their surroundings, and bathe the viewer in a warm, sensuous radiance. The imagery is emphatic and the aftereffect never ends.