Serse: As Far as the Eye Can See, 19 Jan 2016 — 20 Feb 2016
Exhibitions

Serse: As Far as the Eye Can See

Galleria Continua – Beijing, Dashanzi Art District 798 #8503, Chaoyang District

Galleria Continua / Beijing hosts the first solo exhibition in China of Serse, a European master of draughtmanship and the custodian, for almost twenty-five years, of an unequalled technical practice: drawing.

This medium of representation, involving the use of graphite on white paper mounted on aluminium, reflects the artist’s need to create an image that is as simple in perceptual terms as it is suited to the poetic and mimetic dimension, whether on a large scale or in a small format.

The show conceived by the artist for Beijing is entitled “As Far as the Eye Can See”, and comprises a new body of drawings in the A fior d’acqua series and a monographic exhibition of his last twenty years of work. Serse has always drawn inspiration from Chinese artists, with whom he entered into contact through the work of Chih Weng (Jikio^), a Chinese monk and painter active towards the end of the Sung dynasty (1127–1279), and his works cite themes dear to Oriental art, as in Bambu 2004. Serse starts from reality and, through his drawing, reflects on the nature of the gaze and of representation. He too composes forms that do not remain enclosed within the borders of the paper medium, but evoke a much broader dimension – a full-blown philosophy.

Referring to the Elementi works of 2008, Costantino D’Orazio writes: “In this sense, the Renaissance master closest to the intellectual leanings of Serse is undoubtedly Leonardo, to whom the artist from Trieste has dedicated more than one study during his career. In his case, we have to seek out a lesser known series of drawings by da Vinci (…) the series of polyhedrons that Leonardo drew to illustrate De Divina Proportione by Luca Pacioli, published in Milan in 1497. Pacioli was the master who opened up the world of Euclidean geometry, arithmetic theory and, above all, Greek philosophy to Leonardo (…). His etchings illustrate the numerous possibilities for the development of a polyhedron through the symmetrical and proportional expansion of its sides.”

The artist himself has said “I am trying to reinvent drawing”, emphasizing a technical aspect of his “obsessive” work, which enables the vision to emerge from the image. And in fact, when we observe his drawings, we become conscious of the patience and precision of his art, of the concentration of his isolation in the Trieste studio, of the length of time spent outlining, shading, filling and erasing, the exact opposite of drawing as the realization of a sketch. Serse organizes the shadows, impressing blacks onto the whiteness of the paper through the strength of the graphite, and light appears on the paper with the gradual elimination of the layers of black. His practice involves “a constant search for different gazes” by bringing into focus the shades of grey between black and white, in order to grasp the dichotomy between absolute darkness and full light. The effect of the veiling and of the shadows, the subtle transition from opaqueness to transparency, bring the light out from the depths of the subject, as if realized in the “light of the wandering moon” that speaks to our inner self. The absence of colour, or rather noncolour to experiment with illumination, the “dizziness” of every emotion between the beginning and end of everything. “The point of view I go looking for,” says Serse, “is found in the practice of immersing oneself in our own depths; a point of view that brings you into contact with a new reality, totally ‘qualitative, mobile, undivided’ (Bergson), which eludes the quantification of number and measurement. It is the ‘reality’ expressed by the sublimity of nature, by the immeasurability that distinguishes it and traverses us, leaving in us the indelible signs of its immensity. It is the hugeness that does not regard the open eye, but the closed eye.

Contacts & Details
OPENING:
tue, wed, thu, fri, sat, sun 11:00 am – 6:00 pm

CLOSING DAYS:
mon

T: +86 10 5978 9505
M: beijing@galleriacontinua.com.cn
Website

ADDRESS
Galleria Continua – Beijing, Dashanzi Art District 798 #8503, Chaoyang District

ESTABLISHED
2005
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