Bookstore Cure. Eloyan is noted for his large-scale, heavily impastoed, brutally energetic paintings that combine caustic humour with the portrayal of a dark interior world peopled by an unruly set of animals and cartoon characters.
Timothy Taylor Gallery is pleased to present a new series of paintings by the
Armenian born painter Armen Eloyan, in his first solo exhibition at the gallery. In
2007 Eloyan was the subject of an acclaimed solo show at Parasol unit foundation
for contemporary art in London, and will soon be the subject of a solo exhibition at
the Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen, Switzerland in April 2008.
Eloyan is noted for his large-scale, heavily impastoed, brutally energetic paintings
that combine caustic humour with the portrayal of a dark interior world peopled by an
unruly set of animals and cartoon characters. Violence and danger seem to lurk just
beneath the surface: Artforum described them as ‘a battlefield straight out of Goya’.
In some of the largest paintings in the exhibition, Eloyan depicts his characters holed
up in the claustrophobic interior of a wooden cabin, in which tiny windows provide no
escape. The sense of oppression and impending doom is increased by the ostensibly
comedic subject matter. In Back and Forth (2007), two Minnie and Mickey figures are
busy with a domestic washing and ironing scene, but the viscerality and energy of
the painting suggests darker undercurrents and themes. In (Bunch of a Story)
Tea Table (2007/8) - two Krazy Kat characters are manically having tea, while in
Bear and Dog (2007), the largest painting in the exhibition, the two figures seem to
literally act as embodiments of Eloyan’s curious mixture of pathos and aggression
expressed in paint. Eloyan is also a master of multi-layered imagery as he piles
brushstroke onto brushstroke in a whirling chaos of description. Enigmatic details
come in and out of focus, often only revealing themselves after several viewings.
Eloyan uses a very different technique for his smaller paintings, which often isolate
single objects, and give them a profound resonance. In Clown Shoes (2008), a pair
of Max Wall shoes resembling blackened bananas create a fine balance between
humour and pathos - set against a swirling abstract background they have a terrifying
existential dimension. Eloyan’s blend of humour, storytelling and suppressed
violence provides a beguiling and terrifying vision worthy of Franz Kafka and Philip
Guston, and is ultimately a powerful reminder of the power of paint to suggest the
energy and turmoil of life.
Armen Eloyan was born in Armenia in 1966. He lives and works in Zurich and
studied at the Rijksakademie in Amsterdam. His work is held in public and private
collections in Europe and North America. In addition to his forthcoming shows at
Timothy Taylor Gallery and the Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen, Eloyan is currently
exhibiting in a group show at Glasgow's Transmission Gallery.
Opening march 11, 2008
Timothy Taylor Gallery
21 and 24 Dering Street - London
Open 10-6pm Mon-Fri; 10-1pm Sat
Free admission