L’autunno
londinese si avvia con una serie di importanti nuove aperture, dopo
le recenti David Zwirner e Sprüth Magers è la volta dell’italiana
Cardi Gallery, e della Parafin, che ha inaugurato da pochi giorni al
18 di Woodstock Street, che nasce da due degli operatori della
scomparsa Haunch of Venison, acquisita tempo fa da Christie’s, Ben
Tufnell e Matt Watkins.
www.parafin.co.uk
La prima mostra da Parafin è con un giovane artista cecoslovacco Hynek Martinec.
Parafin is pleased to announce the inaugural exhibition at its gallery at 18 Woodstock Street, Mayfair, showing new paintings by the young Czech artist Hynek Martinec (b. 1980). Martinec’s works are ambitious statements about time, spirituality and the nature of reality. Martinec’s extraordinary hyperrealist paintings combine a deep commitment to art history with contemporary subject matter.
Known primarily for an ongoing series of photorealist portraits depicting his partner Zuzana, which have been exhibited
internationally, Martinec’s new project is a series of large-scale monochrome paintings, collectively entitled ‘Every Minute You Are Closer to Death’. These technically astonishing works depict carefully contrived compositions that play with the archetypes of the devotional picture and the vanitas. Traditional signifiers of mortality such as dead animals, skulls, candles and empty bottles are mixed with contemporary references such as Damien Hirst’s notorious diamond skull displayed on a tablet computer, a digital radio, party balloons and cotton buds. In many of the paintings the subjects are distorted by shaving foam, a contemporary substance which appears solid but which is actually fluid and mutable, and which evokes both vanity and impermanence.
Hynek Martinec is currently exhibiting in the John Moores Painting Prize 2014 at the Walker Art Gallery, Liverpool,
as part of the Liverpool Biennial. In 2015 he will have a solo
exhibition at the prestigious Vaclav Spala Gallery in Prague. Martinec was included in Beyond Reality: British Painting
Today at the Galerie Rudolfinium, Prague in 2012 and the Prague Biennial in 2009. He was included in the BP Portrait Prize exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, London in 2007, 2009 and 2013, winning the Young Artist award in 2007. Martinec’s work is in private and public collections including
the National Gallery, Prague and the British Museum, London.
Martinec lives and works in London.