RICHARD HÖGLUND

Vine Pictures & Vénus piquée par un buisson de roses

Brussels • 15 Sept. — 17 Oct. 2021


Richard Höglund likes material that reacts to light and has always liked to use natural pigments and take up the old techniques, silver point, linen prepared with bone powder, gold powder, lead, tin, marble dust… This year, he is adding lapis lazuli pigments to this renaissance panoply, which he is making for more colouful works than his 2017 “Sea Pictures” series.

Vine Pictures

This vine grew on Naxos as though it were the first vine. I was on Naxos to do research for my ongoing project, A mind divided is no temple to Apollo. The vine thrust from the earth behind the house where we ate and slept. I was reading Sonnets to Orpheus at the table behind the house.

« Blatt meiner Worte » « Leaf of my word »

I began drawing the vine; writing it, as light shifted above and below. I say below, because I was sat with this vine on the edge of a cliff, and, from our perch, sky and sea moved together as the hours passed.

« Wave whose sea I gradually become »

The sea and sky moved together and never move. I saw the vine as a consolation, an apologia for hard geological time that was tended to us by Nature. I drew it every day, and with time the vine became like an organic version of Barnett Newman’s « zip », something a person could grab onto whilst the universe revolves in its cold and perfect Real.

Back in the studio, as the drawings developed into paintings, the paintings split into two directions. One, a quiet geometry of sea and sky; the other, the life of the vine, the leaf of my word.

Vénus piquée par un buisson de roses

Eroticism does not exist within an image. A picture operating as a vessel for the erotic must defy the consumable and open up an ambiguous visual space of comings and goings, apparitions and disparitions. The written word, the schema or the sketch are created with a line drawn from the mind to the world through the hand. This line is a seismograph of humanity, upon which the cognitive and the bodily dance.

Making these pictures is sensuous. Drawing my way from erotic memory into physical space, I must feel my way around as though in the dark. Using pure silver –a night metal– I weave flesh and thorn as I oscillate between expressive and mimetic “writing”. A painting, like a garden, like a lover, gives what it gets.

A singular approach.
In this inaugural exhibition, a singular approach, the gallery reaches out to Nepal where disabled children, considered to be the bearers of bad karma, are mistreated and abandoned.
La Galerie Flore will dedicate 10% of each sale to the association Children of Bhaktapur, a charitable NGO that has taken in more than 300 mentally handicapped children.

Children of Bhaktapur needs our help.
More information, please watch this short film hereby joined.
Contact : Albane Courtière – childrenofbhaktapur@gmail.com

VINE PICTURE XVII
VINE PICTURE XVII
SEA PICTURE CLXIV
SEA PICTURE CLXIV
VINE PICTURE II
VINE PICTURE II
VINE PICTURE VI
VINE PICTURE VI
VINE PICTURE VII
VINE PICTURE VII
VINE PICTURE VIII
VINE PICTURE VIII