Raqib Shaw

Exhibition

Painting, sculpture

Raqib Shaw

Past: June 6 → July 25, 2015

Raqib shaw thaddaeus ropac self portrait grid Raqib Shaw — Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Pour sa deuxième exposition à la galerie Thaddaeus Ropac, Raqib Shaw présente des œuvres récentes toujours aussi imprégnées de sa v... 2 - Bien Critique

Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac present Raqib Shaw’s second solo exhibition in the Paris Marais gallery featuring a series of new bronze sculptures and paintings.

Meticulously cast by the traditional “lost wax” casting method at the revered AB Foundry in England, at first glance Shaw’s new sculptures resemble Late-Mannerist bronzes from the Renaissance. However on closer inspection, these tangled groups of perfectly honed male figures that dance, wrestle and contort with each other have the heads of vampire bats, loins of skulls, jaws of fantastical beasts and leather gear and boots from today’s clubs.

Rsh 2054 72dpi crop medium
Raqib Shaw, Self portrait in the studio at Peckham (after Steenwyck the Younger) I, 2014 Acrylic liner and enamel on birch wood — 45⅝ × 61¼ in Courtesy of Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Paris/Salzburg © Raqib Shaw — Photo © Prudence Cuming Associates Ltd

As art historian Caroyln Miner writes in The Maniera of Raqib Shaw : “Like the Mannerist sculptors, Shaw has made his figures, lithe, sinuous and slightly elongated or stretched, especially the necks and limbs… [he] has also aimed to delight and surprise the spectator by incorporating inventive and playful motifs. The bizarre combinations of heads of beasts and genital of toothy jaws are much like the grotesque beasts in Mannerist bronzes.”

True to his signature style, Shaw presents us with radical images that are on the one hand, deeply informed by art historical references and on the other hand, of such grotesque and erotic beauty that our imagination is lead to its utmost limit.

Rsh 2053 72dpi medium
Raqib Shaw, Sextet with Centaur, 2014 Bronze — 29,13 × 28,35 × 29,53 in Courtesy of Galerie Thaddaeus Ropac Paris/Salzburg © Raqib Shaw — Photo © Stephan White

The exhibition will also include four new paintings not only rich in iconographic citations to western and eastern art history, mythology, poetry, theatre and the begginings of science but also in their composition, colour, precision of drawing and uniquely meticoulsy technique. Like an ancient alchemist or contemporary mixologist, Shaw uses enamel paint, a medium not commonly used in the rendering of fine paintings, which he paintstaikingly applies with a porcupine quill to create surfaces with details of intoxicating beauty.

All four new paintings are based on works belonging to London’s National Gallery. Three of the new paintings are self-portraits: one “after Steenwyck”, one “after Antonello da Messina” and the third “after Mocetto” showing the artist either in his study or studio. Although his own image is never a straight forward self portrait, by depicting myriads of objects of great personal significance such as his adored dogs, specific views from his studio’s window, champagne bottles and even his new bronze sculptures, the overall images become stagings of the self.

——————————

In 1998, Raqib Shaw left his native India and Kashmir for London, where he studied and still lives today. He graduated from London’s Central Saint Martins College, and has since presented his work within group exhibitions, including “Without Boundary” at the MoMA in New York (2006), “Around the World in Eighty Days” at the ICA in London (2006), the Suntory Museum in Osaka, Japan (2010), the 17th Biennale in Sydney (2010), the 7th Asia Pacific Triennal in Brisbane (2012) and in the “Summer Exhibition” at the Royal Academy in London (2012). His recent solo exhibitions include a show at the Metropolitan Museum in New York (2008), at the Kunsthalle in Vienna (2009) and the Manchester Art Gallery (2013).

A catalogue, featuring essays by Carolyn Miner and Caroline Arhuero will be published to accompany this exhibition.

  • Lancement de la dernière publication de Raqib Shaw Event Saturday, July 11, 2015 5 PM → 7 PM
03 Le Marais Zoom in 03 Le Marais Zoom out

7, rue Debelleyme

75003 Paris

T. 01 42 72 99 00 — F. 01 42 72 61 66

www.ropac.net

Filles du Calvaire

Opening hours

Tuesday – Saturday, 10 AM – 7 PM

The artist

  • Raqib Shaw