Jiri Georg Dokoupil

Mistakes

18 Oct – 16 Nov 2013

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Mistakes, 2013

Installation view

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Mistakes, 2013

Installation view

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Mistakes, 2013

Installation view

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Mistakes, 2013

Installation view

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Mistakes, 2013

Installation view

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Mistakes, 2013

Installation view

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Mistakes, 2013

Installation view

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Untitled, 2013

Acrylic, soap and pigment on canvas, 65 x 54 cm

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, The very last remains, 2013

Acrylic, soap and pigment on canvas, 115 x 95 cm

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Another Greco, 2013

Acrylic, soap and pigment on canvas, 200 x 145 cm

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Untitled, 2013

Acrylic, soap and pigment on canvas, 200 x 145 cm

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Jiri Georg Dokoupil, Composition with a lot of soap bubbles and a horse, 2013

Acrylic, soap and pigment on canvas, 250 x 300 cm

In 1992-93 Jiri Georg Dokoupil begins a series of so-called “Soap-Bubble Paintings”, which are painted by letting soap-bubbles mixed with colour or ink burst on primed canvas. The soap-bubble series is one of several techniques, other examples are the “Soot Paintings”, “Tire-Paintings” and “Whip Pictures”, through which Dokoupil seeks to transgress conventional approaches to making pictures and reinvent painterly expressivity. The soap-bubbles are connected to several fundamental themes in Dokoupil’s work: Weightlessness, actions, and transience.

In this exhibition the soap-bubble technique has been reintroduced, but in contrast to the earlier works now leading to a totally different aesthetics. The colour scheme is for example radically different. The new paintings are based on pearlescent paints normally used for coating expensive cars, and this gives the soap-bubbles a metallic, dense shine that literally glows in the dark. Futhermore the colours are iridescent so that they appear to change as soon as the angle of view changes. A blue soap-bubble will for instance seem light green when viewed from the side. Thus the pictures are perceptually in constant transformation. Because of the black-painted background, the invididual soap-bubbles are far more autonomous as forms than in the earlier works. They feel heavy and spatial, and give the impression of sculptural volumes you could potentially hold in your own hands. The bubbles vary from semi-transparent membranes to fossilized surfaces. The dark background behind the bubbles has an infinite depth reminding of images of the deep ocean, photographic close-ups, or the space within the body. The new paintings no longer seem in direct contact with abstract expressionism. If they are connected to earlier art it is perhaps primarily to artists such as Matisse, Warhol and Klein, and the Renaissance.

Jiri Georg Dokoupil (b. 1954 in the former Czechoslovakia) lives and works in Madrid, Berlin, Prague and Santa Cruz de Tenerife. He has since the early 1980’s been exhibited widely in Europe and USA, and is represented in art institutions such as Hamburger Bahnhof, Berlin; Neues Museum, Weimar; Horsens Kunstmuseum, Horsens; Centre Pompidou, Paris; Museum Boymans van Beuningen, Rotterdam, and Centro de Arte Reina Sofia, Madrid.