The exhibition features the paintings by Kohei Akiba, Jonathan Delachaux, Jennifer Packer, Schandra Singh & Zheng Wei: the human form is intensely present throughout the show, with bodies sometimes breaking apart into abstract materiality.
Thomas Erben is excited to present an exhibition featuring the work of five young
painters. The human form is intensely present throughout the show, with bodies
sometimes breaking apart into abstract materiality, yet holding together as each
artist balances urgency with precision. While based in different countries – China,
Japan, Switzerland and the USA – these painters connect in their exploration of the
medium’s relation to subject matter.
Kohei Akiba’s paintings are intense and bold, with thickly applied paint creating a
physical presence extending from the painted surface. Working in oil on canvas, he
often focuses on the human face, either in pale and chalky black and white, or in
jarring color. The figurative is pushed to the edge of abstraction, and though the
colors may be far from natural, there is a markedly carnal quality to these
paintings. In comparison, Akiba’s works on paper might seem toned down at first
glance, but they pulsate with the same fierce energy of inner life being thrust to
the surface. In his deeply personal work, the artist lets the abject intermingle
with the sincere.
Kohei Akiba (b. 1982, Tokyo) graduated from the Tokyo University of Arts in 2009.
His work has been exhibited at AMP Gallery (2010), Turner Gallery (2011), and
Nanzuka (2012), all in Tokyo. In 2011, he was one of the recipients of the SICF11
Prize. Akiba lives and works in Tokyo.
In 1994, Jonathan Delachaux created three imaginary characters – Vassili, Johan and
Naima – life-size puppets whose daily life and experiences ever since have formed
the subject matter of his paintings. Beginning in an impulse to document the passing
of time within his art, Delachaux has interacted with these characters, letting them
age as he ages, mixing their lives with those of his friends and himself. Each work
takes on the energy from a performance with his subjects, which he photographs, then
paints with colors separated in reverse, on plastic foil. Once the result is
transferred onto canvas, the lives of Vassili, Johan and Naima exist in the
intersection between performance, photography and painting.
Jonathan Delachaux (b. 1976, Môtiers, Switzerland) graduated from the Ecole
Superieure d'Arts Visuels, Geneva, in 1998. He had numerous solo shows, at venues
such as Galerie Une, Neuchâtel, Switzerland (2002, with Zoé Cappon); Haas & Fischer,
Zürich (2006 and 2009); Schweizerische Botschaft, Berlin (2006); New Galerie de
France, and FIAC (both Paris, 2008); Foxy Production, New York (2009, with Lizzie
Fitch); Galerie Daniel Varenne, Geneva (2011); and J & P Fine Art, Zurich (2012). In
2007, Delachaux’s work was on view in the project space of Thomas Erben Gallery. He
lives and works in Geneva.
There is a tension in the paintings of Jennifer Packer, between the people and
objects represented, and the viewer. Subjects defy the privileged gaze of their
audience, lounging languidly with a complete lack of interest in being watched or
observed. In Packer’s own words, “In a painting like Ottoman (Cushion), even the
objects can feel exhausted of their purpose.” This need to challenge conventions of
what painting does and how it relates to its subjects is supplanted, however, by her
obvious fascination with the medium, and her resulting skill as a painter. Balancing
between the figurative and the fractured, Packer lets shapes blend and flow into
each other, with edges simultaneously precise and dissolving. Every surface is
articulated with a combination of harshness and beauty, where light and emptiness
play as important a role as the paint itself.
Jennifer Packer (b. 1984, Philadelphia, PA) completed her BFA at the Tyler School of
Art in 2007, and her MFA at Yale in 2012. Her work has been exhibited at Woodmere
Art Museum, Philadelphia (2009), Fredericks and Freiser, New York, (2012); and is
currently included in FORE, at The Studio Museum in Harlem, where she is also an
Artist-in-Residence.
Schandra Singh's large-scale oil paintings executed on linen depict locals and
vacationers at far-flung, exotic locales. Built of faceted shapes as if their
muscles and fascia were exposed, the figures are confrontational and aggressive.
Bordering on the grotesque, and profusely detailed, Singh’s subjects are both
victims and perpetrators of a visual culture gone mad. Merging morbidity with
beauty, her work interrogates the psychological and political implications of
leisure in an era of global crisis.
Schandra Singh (b. 1977, Suffern, NY) completed her BFA (1999) at the Rhode Island
School of Design and went on to receive her MFA in painting (2006) at Yale. She had
solo exhibitions at Nature Morte, Berlin (2011), Bose Pacia, New York (2010),
Galerie Bertrand & Gruner, Geneva, (2008) and has shown internationally, most
notably in The Empire Strikes Back, Saatchi Gallery, London (2010). Singh’s work was
included in New Selections: South Asia, at Thomas Erben in 2012. The artist lives
and works in Poughkeepsie, NY.
The distinct and rough materiality in the work of Zheng Wei stems from his
background as a printmaker. Each painting is based in the solidity of wood carving,
but then veers off - into a colorful excess of paint; an assemblage of jagged metal
objects; a violent collage of broken bones and blood. Accessories of rock and punk
culture – such as chains and razors - are common elements, and this esthetic
permeates the work. Wei mixes his materials liberally, studding carved boards with
nuts and bolts, collaging hair, paper and string with cassette tapes, scissors,
shoes. As technical skill is channeled through youthful recklessness, Wei’s work
reverberates in a place between craft and manufactured rebellion.
Zheng Wei (b. 1983, Harbin, China) graduated from the Department of Printmaking at
China Central Academy of Fine Arts in 2008. He had solo exhibitions with Beijing Art
Now Gallery (2010 and 2012) and J Chen Gallery, Taipei (2011), and has participated
in multiple group exhibitions in China, Taiwan and Korea.
Image: Jonathan Delachaux, Second Vassili Party, 2012. Acrylic on cancas, 35,5 x 63 in.
Opening Reception: Thursday, February 28, 6-8:30 pm
Thomas Erben Gallery
526 West 26th Street, floor 4 - New York, NY 10001
Tuesday - Saturday, 10 am to 6 pm