This is where we meet

Simon Le Ruez

20 October – 17 December 2011

Simon Le Ruez, ‘This is where we meet’, 2011, installation view. Photo: Colin Davison

Simon Le Ruez, ‘This is where we meet’, 2011, installation view. Photo: Colin Davison

For Simon Le Ruez’s second solo exhibition at Vane, the artist presents a new body of work including painting, sculpture, installation, and drawing. The show’s title suggests something definitive, a collision of ideas perhaps; it extends a pertinent invitation to the audience whilst remaining aloof about where this may lead.

With an emphasis on materiality, reduction, deconstruction and remaking, the work of Le Ruez thrives on both aesthetic and psychological tensions. Within this framework, his expanding oeuvre revolves around the thematic fields of longing, concealment, transgression and release. His work aims to blur the distinctions between a number of media and through this a commentary evolves on and around various forms of opposition.

Simon Le Ruez, Splitting Paris #1, 2010, found postcard, acrylic paint, thread, leather, 16x21cm. Photo: Colin Davison

Simon Le Ruez, L’Entrée des Groites (detail), 2010, antique postcard, acrylic paint, box mounted in acrylic case, 50x60x6cm. Photo: Colin Davison

Simon Le Ruez, L’Entrée des Groites, 2010, antique postcard, acrylic paint, box mounted in acrylic case, 50x60x6cm. Photo: Colin Davison

Simon Le Ruez, Splitting Paris #2, 2010, found postcard, acrylic paint, 16x21cm. Photo: Colin Davison

Taking black and white stills from the films of Ingmar Bergman as their point of departure, the large scale works on paper, Wild Victor and Until you remember the feelings of (2011), revel in joyful forms of appropriation, interjecting colour and ambiguous form. Other works align themselves in celebrating the use and associative powers of colour. This may be through the altering of antique postcards, hand painted to highlight a given detail within an anonymous location, as in the Correspondence (Hallentrödelmarkt) series (2010), or through the large-scale paper sculptures and installation works that defy any fixed classification through their spirited aesthetic transgressions.



Take a video tour of the exhibition


 

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2011Paul Stone