George Rouy

The Bleed, Part II

18 February – 1 June 2025

Downtown Los Angeles

This February, Hauser & Wirth Downtown Los Angeles hosts ‘The Bleed, Part II,’ British artist George Rouy’s first US solo exhibition with the gallery. Following upon Rouy’s recent London presentation, this ‘second chapter’ will feature all new works extending his exploration of human mass, multiplicity and movement. In works characterized by a distinctive dynamism, Rouy captures essential experiences of contemporary life—desire and vexation, the urge to connect frustrated by alienation—to address emotional extremities in a globalized, technologically-driven age.

Explore the exhibition

The exhibition takes its title from Rouy’s concept of ‘the bleed,’ the ways in which figure and void manifest and interact on the surface of his paintings, resulting in a physical seeping, bleeding and merging. Rouy further extends the bleed to the related concept of ‘the surrounds,’ zones where flesh and bodily properties meet their surrounding conditions—from the intensive attributes of temperature, density and speed to extensive forms of mass, volume and entropy. Adhering to these concepts, the paintings on view reflect tensions between individuals and their environments in parallel with conflicts and harmonies among individuals or groups.

III

2025

Glass

2025

Rouy uses abstraction to disrupt familiar paths of interpretation, guiding the pace at which the viewer reads his paintings. Faces are enfolded, blurred or completely removed from the images, stripping it of its function as a powerful signal or signifier to focus on the body. Consequently, the hands of Rouy’s figures take on a significant role: they connect different parts of the painting’s surface and lead the viewer’s eye and mind through the composition. Possessing an uncanny familiarity, each painting’s composition, forms and energetic impact arise as much from the artist’s mind as from a phantasmagoria.

Rouy refers to his distinctively monochromatic works as ‘phantom paintings.’ Combinations of silver pigment and black charcoal allow the artist to explore extremes of light and dark, chiaroscuro effects that suggest moments in which previously hidden things are flickeringly illuminated and then erased from view. In ‘The Bleed, Part II’ Rouy introduces color to the graphite works, which appear as if weight, mass and feeling in the figure has been body mapped at great speed. The influence of photography and screen-based imagery is evident in all the works, conjuring through the visceral, physical medium of paint the fragmented, distorted reality of our digital age.

Illustrating groups of figures in extreme physical and psychological states, Rouy’s art harkens back to such art historical milestones of narrative tragedy as Theodore Gericault’s ‘The Raft of Medusa’ (1818), depicting the survivors of a famous shipwreck, or ‘The 3 May 1808’ (1814) by Goya, which portrays the execution of Spanish rebels by French troops in Madrid, which is directly referenced in Rouy’s painting, ‘Absentee’ (2025).

Marshalling the contradictory forces of stasis and flow, precision and indeterminacy, Rouy uses human figures—and the oscillation of space between and around them—to reflect on issues of collective care and conflict, considering the question of how we tend to one another from birth until death and how our lives are shaped by the search for balance.

In Performance: ‘BODYSUIT’

Marking the opening week of the exhibition will be the US premiere of ‘BODYSUIT,’ a visionary live work for five dancers by Rouy and internationally acclaimed choreographer Sharon Eyal. Their first collaborative creation, ‘BODYSUIT’ is a multi-disciplinary live event, with exacting, rigorous and liberated practices in movement, light, sound and environment. ‘BODYSUIT’ is commissioned by Hannah Barry Gallery and co-produced with Hauser & Wirth.

On Film: George Rouy

Ursula presents a ‘Breakages and Distortions,’ a conversation between Rouy and writer Ben Luke at the artist’s studio in Faversham, UK, to discuss the ideas behind his new body of work and the careful process that goes into creating his imagery.

On View in Downtown Los Angeles

‘George Rouy. The Bleed, Part II’ is on view through 1 June 2025. The gallery is open Tuesday – Saturday, 10 am – 6 pm.

All artworks © George Rouy. Courtesy the artist, Hannah Barry Gallery and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Damian Griffiths

About the Artist

George Rouy

British artist George Rouy’s dynamic and signature use of the human figure, vexed with desire, alienation and crisis, speaks to the extremities of our time; portraits of identity in a globalized and technologically driven 21st Century.

Focused on the relationship between interior landscapes and the body in motion, Rouy’s work presents us with a new language confronting the human body with bold and subversive energy, transformation and flux. Shapeshifting from unified, ambient subjects made strange and alluring through their sparse and enduring symbolism, to fever dreams of androgynous and gestural forms, charged with lurid flashes of pigment and passages of abstraction, Rouy’s work brings to sharp focus recurring themes: the face as a mask, the individual as a mirror, the self as a shadow.

Rouy’s paintings dissolve unpredictable barriers between internal and external to bring forth a singular experience of the figure: in and out of space and place, in and out of time past, phantom and present, and in and out of body and mind.

During his most recent solo exhibition BODY SUIT (2023) Rouy and leading choreographer Sharon Eyal presented their first joint creation. The outcome of their combined perspectives was a unique, visionary live event with exacting, rigorous, and yet liberated practices in movement, light, sound, and environment. BODYSUIT will be expanded to a full-length live piece in 2024, premiering in London.

George Rouy (b. 1994, Sittingbourne, Kent, UK). Lives and works in Faversham, Kent. Since graduating from Camberwell College of Arts, he has exhibited internationally, including: Present Tense, Hauser & Wirth Somerset, UK (2024), The Echo of Picasso, Museo Picasso Málaga, ES, Endless Song, Nicola Vassell Gallery, New York, USA (2023), BODY SUIT, Hannah Barry Gallery, London, UK (2023), Belly Ache, Almine Rech, Paris, FR (2022); Real Corporeal, Gladstone Gallery, New York, US (2022); A Thing for the Mind, Timothy Taylor Gallery, London, UK (2022); Shit Mirror, Peres Projects, Berlin, DE (2022) (solo); Rested, Nicola Vassell, New York, US (2021); and Clot, Hannah Barry Gallery, London, UK (2020).

His work is represented in the collections of The ALBERTINA Museum & the Albertina Modern, Vienna, AU; ICA, Miami, US; Fondation Cartier pour l’art contemporain and Lafayette Anticipations, Paris, FR; Stahl Collection, Norrkoping, SE; M Woods, X Museum and 69 Art Campus, Beijing, CN; Sifang Art Museum, Nanjing, CN.

The first monograph of his work George Rouy Selected Works 2017-2023 with a text by Charlie Mills was published by Tarmac Press in 2023. The live creation, BODYSUIT, with choreographer Sharon Eyal and original music composed by Rouy, premiered at Hannah Barry Gallery, London in 2023.

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