Miquel Barceló Grisailles

8 October 2022—7 January 2023
Paris Pantin

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Music from far-away parties, today’s banquets and those from long ago – all on the same very long table. — Miquel Barceló

One of Spain’s most acclaimed contemporary artists, Barceló’s practice is influenced by his Mallorcan surroundings, as well as his deep knowledge of the history of art. In his new series, Grisailles, he draws on 17th-century Dutch painting and the Spanish bodegón to offer a new interpretation of still life painting that is anchored in his own relationship to the sea, sustenance and the cycle of life.

Watch a video of the artist discussing the exhibition and his most recent series of Grisaille paintings.

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Watch a video of the artist discussing the exhibition and his most recent series of Grisaille paintings.
Reprising the genre’s traditional codes, Barceló bisects his canvases with life-sized tables, inviting visitors to participate in the curious banquet before them. 
 
Among the objects and creatures on display, empty shells, skulls and open books act as memento mori, remind viewers of their own mortality. They are contrasted by the vegetal elements on the tables: bouquets of flowers and dried palm leaves, which symbolise life and rebirth.
The feast is populated with sea creatures that the artist fishes himself on the island where he lives and works. Eels and octopi, shrimp and lobsters – they connect the scene to nature, suggesting a comment on the precarity of plenitude and on the value of a profound connection with the land.
I know there is a lobster and a Dogon statuette that nearly extends the foot of the table. The dog...

I know there is a lobster and a Dogon statuette that nearly extends the foot of the table. The dog lying under the table is Fosca, still the same one, which can be found in many of my paintings from that year.— Miquel Barceló

 

Tableau couleur orange sanguine, 2021
Mixed media on canvas
235 x 235 (92.52 x 92.52 in)

The jug-self-portrait with black flowers is from Gauguin. I now think the other heads are also self-portraits. Even the swordfish....
The jug-self-portrait with black flowers is from Gauguin. I now think the other heads are also self-portraits. Even the swordfish....

The jug-self-portrait with black flowers is from Gauguin. I now think the other heads are also self-portraits. Even the swordfish. Especially the swordfish. In this painting there are three flower bouquets and a candle. In fact, it’s a sandwich of things between the darkness of the ceiling and under the table. — Miquel Barceló

This painting is currently on view at the Louvre, as part of the unprecedented Les Choses exhibition, retracing the history of the still life genre. 

Grisaille à l'éspadon, 2022
Mixed media on canvas
235 x 285 cm (92.52 x 112.2 in)
On a linen canvas, I had made a charcoal drawing of a large group of fish, like an aquarium. There...

On a linen canvas, I had made a charcoal drawing of a large group of fish, like an aquarium. There was even a large grouper head occupying the right side. Then, much later, I used white to paint these octopuses – candles – goat skulls – flower bouquets... Along with the horse’s head at the top left and the dog sitting at the bottom. Of all these paintings, this is the most ‘palimpsetic’. It is made of contradictions: light-dark, fish-mammal, living-dead... The horse head in the left corner hails from a 1930s American film. A large grouper head occupies three quarters of the painting below. — Miquel Barceló

 

Taula goliàrdica, 2021
Mixed media on canvas
235 x 295 cm (92.52 x 116.14 in)
The bison covers a large still life. Like the Jurassic folded over the Holocene, or the opposite. Chauvet, Altamira, El...
The bison covers a large still life. Like the Jurassic folded over the Holocene, or the opposite. Chauvet, Altamira, El Castillo, Lascaux, Three Brothers, La Pileta, Arcy, Tuc d’Audoubert, El Pendo, Cosquer, Tito Bustillo, Rouffignac. — Miquel Barceló
 
Gran bisonte, 2021
Mixed media on canvas
235 x 285 cm (92.52 x 112.2 in)

Known for the richly textured, sedimented surfaces of his works, Barceló takes a different approach in this exhibition, adopting a variation on the traditional grisaille technique, where translucent layers of colour are applied over a monochromatic underpainting. The result is a group of paintings that are airier and more loosely composed than the artist’s previous treatment of still lifes, allowing the grain of the canvas to show behind the thin layers of ink and acrylic.

The paella. It’s a subject I come back to from time to time. Like fish or books. A paella contains...
The paella. It’s a subject I come back to from time to time. Like fish or books. A paella contains almost everything. — Miquel Barceló
 
El cabrón, 2022
Mixed media on canvas
235 x 375 cm (92.52 x 147.64 in)
It was like a variation of Poisson d’Avril (April Fool’s), but I covered it with lemon yellow and then shot...
It was like a variation of Poisson d’Avril (April Fool’s), but I covered it with lemon yellow and then shot it with bursts of white light, as if things were in combustion. To create the shadows, I sometimes use a spray gun that I like to believe will breathe animist Dogon memories into my work. For the light, I used an enormous machine with a compressor. It is made to spit out dozens of pounds of paint. — Miquel Barceló
 
White Light, 2021
Mixed media on canvas
190 x 240 cm (74.8 x 94.49 in)
I added a bouquet of chrysanthemums and a shrimp. It went through several stages before ending up like this. Bones...
I added a bouquet of chrysanthemums and a shrimp. It went through several stages before ending up like this. Bones...
I added a bouquet of chrysanthemums and a shrimp. It went through several stages before ending up like this. Bones in the sun. A jenny’s skull and its ribs undone, jumbled, without its coccyx or extremities. The whole thing looks like a monstrous flower. — Miquel Barceló
 
Elle et moi, 2021
Mixed media on canvas
140 x 240 cm (55.12 x 94.49 in)
Barceló compares the act of painting to ‘breathing life’ into his canvases. Although less dense and layered than his previous work, this life infuses the delicate materiality of the grisaille paintings. As what he describes as the ‘dusty and sizzling’ charcoal mingles with vibrant pigment blown directly onto the canvas, elsewhere, gentle impasto accumulates like sea foam or lichen in the white underlay.
Music from far-away parties, today’s banquets and those from long ago – all on the same very long table. It’s...

Music from far-away parties, today’s banquets and those from long ago – all on the same very long table. It’s better to say nothing. (It’s half a VITA but it could be a lifetime). — Miquel Barceló

Mezza vita, 2022
Mixed media on canvas
235 x 285 cm (92.52 x 112.2 in)
Presence is balanced with absence, colour with monochrome, abundance with scarcity, life with death. Inviting viewers into this suspension, Barceló’s still lifes encourage us to engage with the renewal and decay at the heart of some of the most pressing questions of contemporary life.
 
This old joke: You take a bull and stuff it with a pig. In it, a lamb. Inside, a turkey...
This old joke: You take a bull and stuff it with a pig. In it, a lamb. Inside, a turkey stuffed with a chicken, which contains a woodcock with an olive inside. — Miquel Barceló
 
Cárdeno sobre azul, 2022
Mixed media on canvas
130 x 162.5 cm (51.18 x 63.98 in)
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
    Atmospheric image Atmospheric image
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