SELECTED WORKS BY Jaime Gili
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Jaime Gili
Barbaro
2006
Acrylic on canvas
230 x 268 cm |
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In paintings such as Barbaro, Ochoa, and Trikalinou, Jaime Gili incites the austere purity of geometric design with the confidence and authenticity of painterly gesture. Presented in a cluster, his paintings are not hung, but leaned against the wall, creating a temporal architecture inciting of the constant transience and development of urban space. Executed with a palmy palette, Gili’s large scale canvases capitalise on the power of aesthetics to motivate and allure. Bold splinters of pitch black, copper metallic, or tainted pink pierce through grounds animate with drips, smudges, and impassioned swipes, creating monumental fields of raw, potent energy.
Hailing from Venezuela, Gili works from a distinctly South American perspective. Influenced by the sharp geometric angles of 20th c architecture and the sleek elegance of classic automotive detailing, Gili’s paintings disengage the international archetypes of modernism: reflecting instead a localised adaptation of style, where design and its social implications have been internalised and customised to represent a unique national and political identity and cultural heritage. Citing his country’s rapid oil-rich economic growth and intensive South American visionary developments such Caracas and Brasilia, Gili’s paintings address this utopian new world optimism and its inherent failure.
Gili’s canvases are nostalgic for this obsolete positivism; where the idealistic development of public space and the appetite for mechanical amelioration both affirmed and inspired a sense of social buoyancy and community. Borrowing from the Constructivists’s ideas of bridging art and technology, Gili’s shard-like compositions are reminiscent of Ljubov Popova and Mikhaiul Larionov, while simultaneously paying homage to great South American abstractionists such as Cruz Diez, Jesus Rafael Soto and Alejandro Otero. |
Jaime Gili
Ochoa
2006
Acrylic on canvas
268 x 230 cm |
 |
In paintings such as Barbaro, Ochoa, and Trikalinou, Jaime Gili incites the austere purity of geometric design with the confidence and authenticity of painterly gesture. Presented in a cluster, his paintings are not hung, but leaned against the wall, creating a temporal architecture inciting of the constant transience and development of urban space. Executed with a palmy palette, Gili’s large scale canvases capitalise on the power of aesthetics to motivate and allure. Bold splinters of pitch black, copper metallic, or tainted pink pierce through grounds animate with drips, smudges, and impassioned swipes, creating monumental fields of raw, potent energy.
Hailing from Venezuela, Gili works from a distinctly South American perspective. Influenced by the sharp geometric angles of 20th c architecture and the sleek elegance of classic automotive detailing, Gili’s paintings disengage the international archetypes of modernism: reflecting instead a localised adaptation of style, where design and its social implications have been internalised and customised to represent a unique national and political identity and cultural heritage. Citing his country’s rapid oil-rich economic growth and intensive South American visionary developments such Caracas and Brasilia, Gili’s paintings address this utopian new world optimism and its inherent failure.
Gili’s canvases are nostalgic for this obsolete positivism; where the idealistic development of public space and the appetite for mechanical amelioration both affirmed and inspired a sense of social buoyancy and community. Borrowing from the Constructivists’s ideas of bridging art and technology, Gili’s shard-like compositions are reminiscent of Ljubov Popova and Mikhaiul Larionov, while simultaneously paying homage to great South American abstractionists such as Cruz Diez, Jesus Rafael Soto and Alejandro Otero. |
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ARTIST INFORMATION
OTHER RESOURCES
jaimegili.org
Official Jaime Gili website including texts, reviews, artworks and information
re-title.com
Go Faster Stripes is a collection of work by the Venezuelan-born artist, Jaime Gili, which refers to modernist motifs and their scattered traces.
riflemaker.org -
Jaime Gili, Makes things triangular
Jaime Gili was born in Caracas (Venezuela) in 1972. He grew up in a multicultural capital full of vibrant optical art, a concrete city full of optimism. Caracas, in the late seventies, presented its own version of the International modernism movement in art and architecture.
riflemaker.org
For his first solo exhibition at Riflemaker, Venezuelan artist Jaime Gili will be making things triangular.
riflemaker.org
Jaime Gili Makes Things Triangular at Riflemaker
norwichgallery.co.uk
Jamie Gili; born Caracas Venezuela 1972 studied University of Barcelona and Royal College of Art lives London.
art-omma.org - Speed and Painting by Jaime Gili
1. Parked Cars. Car design, car marketing, from arrows to vectors to computers, depicting motion in a moving object, 'go faster' stripes.
2. One movement, four directions. Duchamp, distortion, Bacon, Kandinsky, tension and harmony, the arrow an the machine, Picabia.
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Other artists in GERMANIA:NEW ART FROM GERMANY
Gert & Uwe Tobias | Markus Amm | Dirk Bell | Felix Gmelin | Ulrich Lamsfuss | Andrea Lehmann | Jonathan Meese | Kirstine Roepstorff | Julian Rosefeldt
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