LONDON.- Shapero Modern presents Chroma Hunt, an exhibition of hand-coloured etchings by the celebrated British artist, Hugo Wilson.
The images in this portfolio of nine etchings are closely related to Wilsons recent series of paintings which portray the most primal of all rituals, the hunt. Hunting scenes were popular with wealthy collectors in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. They represented a kind of trophyism and a way of displaying mastery over nature. Wilsons etchings are based on, or inspired by, famous paintings by old masters such as Rubens and Stubbs and show bizarre events where great beasts such as lions and crocodiles have been trained to hunt other animals. These images of writhing, snarling forms, some recognisable, others indistinct, portray immense animal strength - but the hunter remains unseen. Suggestive of mythic battle scenes, Wilsons paintings shake the foundation of the context that they appear to mimic.
Wilsons classical training is evident in his extraordinary technical facility he studied at the renowned Charles H. Cecil Studio in Florence, Italy as well as in his reverence for the masters of the Western artistic canon. His work suggests both a devotion to and subversion of this tradition. Wilsons interest in mutability and instability is manifested in these works that take elements from European old master paintings and classical sculpture, and subjects them to a process of transformation. In the finished works reconfigured elements from the originals hover at the edge of legibility whilst new possibilities for meaning emerge.
The art historian Alison Bracker has written: As his stunning new work confirms, Wilson translates the aesthetics of past centuries and cultures into an oeuvre that continually wrestles with one question in particular: why has man persisted in creating and sustaining ideological structures throughout time? The question invigorates the artists Hunt paintings, which reimagine the hunting rituals and mythologies enacted within works by Rubens, Stubbs and Venetian painter Jacopo de Barbari.
Wilson works across a range of media including painting, drawing, sculpture and printmaking. His use of etching in these works also recalls eighteenth and nineteenth century natural history illustrations, particularly John James Audubons ornithological masterpiece, The Birds of America, 1827. Wilsons interests are wide-ranging and encompass science, religion and culture, systems of classification, history and memory. Addressing such diverse subjects, his work enacts an investigative process in which the outcome is by no means certain. The work forms a series of open-ended questions and correspondingly provisional answers.
Alison Bracker, from Never a Single Approach, in Hugo Wilson, Parafin, London, 2015
Hugo Wilsons solo exhibition, Rape of Europa, is at Parafin 24 November 2016-28 January 2017. Recent solo exhibitions include Project B, Milan (2013) and Mihai Nicodim Gallery, Los Angeles (2012), and he will feature in an exhibition at Galerie Judin, Berlin, in 2017. He was included in Play Things at the New York Public Library (2013), Nightfall: New Tendencies in Figurative Painting at the MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Art, Debrecen, Hungary (2012) and the Busan Biennial (2010). Wilsons work is in private and public collections internationally, including the New York Public Library, the Deutsche Bank Collection and the Fondazione Memmo in Rome. In October 2013, Wilson was featured as one of just six rising stars in European art by the Wall Street Journal. Wilson lives and works in London, and is represented by Parafin.