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Piotr Uklański

Brut

June 11–July 24, 2009
Davies Street, London

Piotr Uklański: Brut Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut

Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut

Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut

Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut

Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut Installation view

Piotr Uklański: Brut

Installation view

Works Exhibited

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Crack), 2009 Paper mounted to cardboard, 58 × 38 × 3 ½ inches (147.3 × 96.5 × 8.9 cm)

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Crack), 2009

Paper mounted to cardboard, 58 × 38 × 3 ½ inches (147.3 × 96.5 × 8.9 cm)

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Monster), 2009 Jute, linen, sisal and aluminum, 78 × 117 × 27 ¼ inches (198 × 297 × 69 cm)

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Monster), 2009

Jute, linen, sisal and aluminum, 78 × 117 × 27 ¼ inches (198 × 297 × 69 cm)

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Lava), 2009 Resin on aluminum panel, 73 × 51 ½ × 11 inches (185.4 × 130.8 × 27.9 cm)

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Lava), 2009

Resin on aluminum panel, 73 × 51 ½ × 11 inches (185.4 × 130.8 × 27.9 cm)

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Pink Placenta), 2009 Resin on canvas, 70 × 93 × 7 11/16 inches (177.8 × 236.2 × 19.6 cm)

Piotr Uklański, Untitled (Pink Placenta), 2009

Resin on canvas, 70 × 93 × 7 11/16 inches (177.8 × 236.2 × 19.6 cm)

About

Gagosian Gallery is pleased to present "Brut", Piotr Uklański's first solo gallery exhibition in London since 1998. The exhibition debuts a new body of work that was born out of the artist's critical interest in a specific set of European aesthetics and politics from the immediate postwar era.

The title of the exhibition makes reference to art brut—a term coined by artist Jean Dubuffet in 1945. Roughly translated as "rough" or "crude" art, this blanket phrase was applied to various forms of so-called outsider art that informed the work of Dubuffet and other artists of his generation, such as Jean Fautrier, Wols, Michel Tapié, and Germaine Richier—part of a larger circle of artists that formed the art informel movement.

Whether made by inmates, tribal people, children, the self-taught, or the mentally ill, art brut was heralded as form of a political opposition to the bourgeois, refined forms of art that dominated the cultural establishment. Fueled by this interest in outsider art, the art informel movement built a confrontational aesthetic that emphasized "deskilled" techniques and tactile, impastoed painting surfaces, as well as an attraction to dirty, corporeal and scatological references, to register the traumas of WWII. Just as Dubuffet and his comrades were looking for inspiration outside the cultural status quo, Uklański looks back at this movement, which, as art historian Yve-Alain Bois has asserted, has been subjected to art historical sublimation: "the repression of this work is not only an American phenomenon—it just took a different form in Europe, that of sanitization."

For "Brut", Uklański has created two new resin paintings with heavy impasto surfaces, Untitled (Lava) and Untitled (Pink Placenta); a collage of burned handmade paper, Untitled (Crack); and a new three-dimensional, woven-fiber painting, Untitled (Monster). While formally and materially diverse, these three different modes of pictorial art making all employ labor-intensive and process-oriented techniques that recall French 1950s matièrisme and tkanina artystyczna (Polish textile art). In addition to these historically established practices, Uklański incorporates visceral yet artificial materials, such as resin, that function as a contemporary equivalent to the art brut aesthetic. These works evoke for example the vulva-like vortexes of Wols' oil paintings or the misunderstood, infantile "haute pâte" (thick paste) paintings of Dubuffet. These works also reflect Uklański's ongoing attraction to the suggestive power and political contention of postwar European aesthetics. Looking backwards to go forwards, Uklański's "Brut" posits this neglected chapter of art history as a contemporary form of outsider art. "Brut" represents a new focal point within Uklanski's radically heterogeneous oeuvre and marks a return to a traditional studio practice that engages materiality, alchemical processes and the human body.

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