Amongst these themes is the idea of ‘carrying’, exploring how we are carried into—and eventually out of—life, alongside feelings of being carried, or the opposite, being dropped. Applied to the mass of figures within his paintings, Rouy considers collective care and how we care for each other from birth until death, how our lives are a sequence of experiences of balance and unease.
In these new works, abstraction is used as a tool of pursuing a sensation of distortion. The gestural sections are used not as abstract marks per se but as a series of signals to breakages in the figures, and to control the pace of looking at the picture. The works offer an uncanny familiarity, with each composition invoking forms and feelings born as much from the artist’s mind as they are a phantasmagoria, lost of reference and time.
Indeed, the works integrate many different photographic, lens and screen-based references. Rouy has always sought for his paintings to reference the human form ‘from life’ through a ‘distorted reality’ which he is able to find at source on screen or in photography. That said, he equally sees painting as an extraction of reality, with an uneasy connection or relation back to it.
For ‘The Bleed, Part I,’ Rouy experiments with a purely monochrome palette for the first time, resulting in works that he calls ‘phantom paintings.’ The combination of silver pigment and black charcoal creates new opportunities to explore the extremes of light and darkness, shadow and illumination, making visible previously hidden aspects of form.
Rouy’s figures become increasingly abstracted, their faces often blurred or completely removed. As the face is increasingly eliminated as a signifier or signpost in his paintings the hands take on a new role, connecting different parts of the painting together, as well as guiding the viewer around the painting surface, composition, and ideas. This blurring allows Rouy to create space within the work; by avoiding any distinct markers of gender or identity, the work taps into a common consciousness and transcends a locked experience. In illustrating a mass or collective of figures in extreme or altered psychological stages, Rouy references classical tragedy paintings—such as ‘The Raft of Medusa’ (1818) by Theodore Gericault, in which the survivors of a shipwreck are depicted—in his desire to reflect how the body itself provokes emotion. Rouy’s barely distinguishable figures suspended weightlessly on the canvas are inspired by the feeling of Gericault’s figures floating adrift out at sea.
Articulating a vocabulary of figurative painting which is as distinctive as it is visceral, Rouy’s paintings are defined by contradictions: stasis and flow, precision and indeterminacy. In doing so, he undermines the body as a fixed unit, proposing instead a body that constantly imagines and defines itself through its relationship with itself, with others and with the world at large.
Accompanying the exhibition, our Learning program will involve the artist himself and engage learners with Rouy’s work. This includes an ‘Educators Evening’ on Thursday 7 November.
Image: George Rouy, 2024 © George Rouy. Courtesy the artist, Hannah Barry Gallery and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Kemka Ajoku