PAUL INSECT : SEEYOU AT ALLOUCHE GALLERY
Paul Insect - SEEYOU
Opening reception: Thursday November 9th 6-9pm
Allouche Gallery is thrilled to present “Seeyou,” an upcoming solo exhibition featuring a collection of new paintings by the British artist, Paul Insect.
A London based artist who originally hails from south-east England, Paul's distinct artistic style is a mesmerizing interplay of revelation and obscurity, urging viewers to contemplate their subjectivity in a society marked by constant streams of information.
A true mix media artist, Insect has worked with painting, screen printing, video, performance, and sculptures from found and discarded objects. For his new show, “Seeyou,” Paul has used a clever mix of painted wall fragments that hint at his street art roots, along with a range of large paintings on canvas and smaller works on wood panels.
Paul Insect first became known for his graphic work in the 90's and as one of London’s original street art trailblazers. With his collective 'Insect', Paul started creating flyers for clubs in London, working with the print house 'Pictures on Walls,’ while creating artwork for various music labels and musicians. He then broke out as a solo artist with his first show in 2007 'Bullion' in London's Soho, which was entirely bought-out by Damien Hirst before the opening. The show cleverly featured piles of gold bullion bars with bites taken out of them. Since then, Paul's honest visual language has become ubiquitous in the contemporary art scene — his meticulously hand painted raster dots create a pixelated effect on his subjects whose details are obscured by large bold shapes and protruding ears. In doing so, he is able to manipulate the viewer’s perspective, to hide certain parts of his subject’s faces while revealing others. In a world marked by self-representation and identity riddled anxiety, Insect finds power and meaning in his universe of anonymous figures.
In ‘see you’ Paul continues to develop his aesthetic language, cutting and cropping portraits with distant gazes from different angles, while expanding or distorting features. Insect’s work is in part inpsired by his screen printing and graphic design roots, creating a troupe l’ceil painted photocopy effect. Through this process, Insect is able to access that funny feeling that can best be described as recovering a damaged old photograph - at once familiar and uncanny, but always joyful.