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MISHKO PAPIC: SAATCHI ONLINE CRITIC'S CHOICE BY BEN STREET
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'Victorious King', 2004
watercolour on paper, 69x56

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'When Kings Were Kings', 2005
watercolour on paper, 69x56

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'Glory Days', 2005
watercolour on paper, 69x56

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'First Contact', 2005
watercolour, 60cm x 45cm

Watercolours are poised at the point between painting and drawing, between acting and thinking. John Ruskin's watercolours of Venetian Gothic architecture are preemptive acts of romantic nostalgia, the medium's own insubstantiality - fading in bright light, evaporating in strong heat, dissolving in a splash of water - somehow reflecting that of his subject. The portability and relative ease of watercolour painting makes it the flâneur-historian's medium of choice. Like Ruskin's, Mishko Papic's watercolours are sometimes framed with scribbly notes and leaps of thought and thus have the quality, together, of a pre-war museum catalogue, the idiosyncratic inventory of the shuttered academic.

Taking as his subject the British Museum's Benin bronzes, Papic paints the objects as objects, faithfully recording a fraying of thin bronze, a warped corner. Each of his images is lit in the raking light of the conservator's studio. It's scientific, purposeful. The Benin bronzes are displayed in the BM's African galleries on vertical rods, but not so in Papic's renderings: each is observed in isolation, like a specimen in a lab. Yet, as with Ruskin, this is no mere transcription of reality, and it's no coincidence that they happen to be watercolours, either. The Benin bronzes are remnants of the West African kingdom (part of present-day Nigeria) that was roundly pillaged by British soldiers in 1897. The bronzes, originally designed to be hung on pillars in the atria of Benin's opulent royal palaces, were looted and sold to the British Museum in 1899. Their complex symbolism, stippled patterning and plunging relief made them hard to locate within Eurocentric views of history that placed classicism as the summit of aesthetic endeavor; in no way do they conform to 'primitivist' notions of African art. So, historically, they're awkward. Ruskin, too, saw an endearing awkwardness in Gothic buildings: something human, something bodily, as respite from all that boxy classicism. Questions, not answers.

Papic's use of watercolour posits the bronzes as components in an ethnographic inventory - they're largely lacking in background, and fill the space of the paper in an expository way, like illustrations in a history text book - yet it also gives the images a kind of distance and frailty that holds the subject at arm's length, as though seen through frosted glass. Depicted at a meticulous remove, the images - like 'First Contact' (2005), a rendering of a Benin image of a Portugese trader on which much of the royal wealth of Benin was built - are filled with a kind of questioning, opening up the strangeness of the images rather than securing them to a historical continuum. It's as though the act of painting loosens up the image rather than nailing it down. The more you see, the less you know.

To see more of his work registered on Saatchi Online click here.

Ben Street
 
Ben Street is a teacher of Art History living in London, and every so often he writes on new and old art for Artnet, Triple Canopy, Art21 and Art Review. He is also a lecturer and storyteller for children aged between 3 and 19 at London's National Gallery, and spends his summers lecturing around Italy for Art History Abroad. Ben is a former educator at the Museum of Modern Art and the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York and started his career packing ice-cream at an ice-cream factory in East Anglia.
 
Published on 04-05-2009
 
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