Exhibition

JENNY SAVILLE: OXYRHYNCHUS

13 Jun 2014 – 26 Jul 2014

Regular hours

Friday
10:00 – 18:00
Saturday
10:00 – 18:00
Tuesday
10:00 – 18:00
Wednesday
10:00 – 18:00
Thursday
10:00 – 18:00

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JENNY SAVILLE: OXYRHYNCHUS

About

Gagosian is pleased to present the first-ever solo exhibition of Jenny Saville?s paintings in London.

Captivated by the endless aesthetic and formal possibilities of the materiality of the human body, Saville makes a highly sensuous and tactile impression of surface and mass in her monumental oil paintings. Subjects are imbued with a sculptural yet elusive dimensionality that verges on the abstract. In recent paintings, she renews her enduring figurative investigations by depicting bodies embracing and intertwined.

Several new works are inspired by the ancient Egyptian rubbish dump at Oxyrhynchus, one of the most important archeological sites ever discovered. Heaps of discarded documents and literature, incredibly preserved in the area?s dry climate, are now invaluable; fragments of ancient Greek texts such as Euclid?s Elements and the poems of Sappho are among the excavated papyri. Saville alludes to this history through a deep layering of paired subjects: faces, torsos, and limbs overlap with shadows and reflections, palimpsests of living bodies and ancestral apparitions. Silhouettes drawn in charcoal through the surfaces of oil paint underscore the motion of the central embracing figures, while evoking the timeless human process of sketching. These intermediate ?studies? echo the shifting status of the unearthed papers?once discarded, now treasured.

Time is further compressed by Saville's adaptation of various historical approaches to portraiture, from De Kooning?s fluid abstractions of the female figure; to the almost combined couples of Picasso?s late paintings and Japanese Shunga prints; to Titian?s placement of subjects within dramatic perspectival landscapes, exemplified by Nymph and Shepherd (c. 1570?75). Saville?s own figures merge ethereally with settings that have been loosely appropriated from photographs and evoke the backdrops of Renaissance paintings.

Paintings on paper distill this subtle figuration into focused portraits, some taking several years to complete. Study for Shadow Head (2007?14) reveals the tension between the subject?s features and piercing gaze and the reality of the painting itself as a surface of thick, gestural brushstrokes. In Generation (2012?14), multiple impressions of each figure are drawn and painted to create studies in simultaneity; the relationship between mother and child is conveyed in a series of dynamic poses that move beyond formal composition and iconographic order into the realm of metaphysics.

A fully illustrated catalogue with an essay by John Elderfield is forthcoming.

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