Jaime Gili
The Lakes
7 March - 16 April 2011
PRIVATE VIEW: Monday 7 March: 6-9pm
ARTIST'S TALK: with Jaime Gili
to book: 0207-439-0000 or email
[email protected]
Tickets £10 cash on the door, includes drinks.
Click here for hi-res images
Jaime Gili (b. Caracas 1972) is a painter and printmaker whose canvases and installations draw on the history of sequential and op art in Venezuala. His art activities reference peripheral modernist art and architecture movements and the work of artists from a rich 20c tradition in that country.
Gili began his art studies in Prodiseño, Caracas in 1988. Moving to Europe in 1990, he lived and studied in Barcelona, concluding his BA in 1995 and a PhD from Universidad de Barcelona on 'Repetition in Art' in 2000. He also worked and studied in Lisbon, Paris and Berlin. He began his studies at London's Royal College of Art in 1996, graduating in 1998. He then completed several residencies and was the recipient of an Arts Council fellowship.
Gili is currently featured in the Whitechapel Gallery exhibition 'This Is Tomorrow' and in the current Saatchi Gallery's 'Newspeak 2'. Other recent projects include his five floor installation at Bloomberg, London as part of the Comma series, and his winning of the international competition to create the world's largest site-specific public art project; 25,000 square metres comprising sixteen large oil tanks along the Fore River in South Portland, Maine. Work began in 2009 and will take several years. In 2006 he made an exterior installation in paint and cut-vinyl around St. Paul's and Peternoster Square as part of the London Architecture Bienniel.
Gili's work features in many public and private collections.
THE LAKES
Jaime Gili's exhibition
The Lakes recalls the design created in Caracas by Brazilian landscape architect Roberto Burle Marx, as well as the history of additions and interjections which have plagued it since its conception.
Opened in 1961,
Parque del Este (Park of The East) is a jewel of modernist architecture. Gili's new paintings and sculptures take as their compositional starting point an aerial view of the nine lakes in the original plans.
As a young artist growing up in Caracas, Gili witnessed various alterations to the parks' landscape, changes that he and many others have not always supported. The area and its rich history continue to inspire him - he has recently worked on a hypothetical commission for the original site, but still with
Utopia at its heart.
In 1969, a full-scale replica of
Nao Santa Maria, the ship that brought Christopher Columbus to America's mainland coast, was placed in one of the lakes of the park by the then Venezuelan government. The sight of a galleon style flagship anchored within a modernist environment seemed incongruous to many of those who visited.
More recently, the military government of Hugo Chávez, having considered this vessel a symbol of colonial power, proposed removing the replica, and replacing it with
The Leander (another Columbus-style parody), one that, they say, transported the War of Independence leader Francisco de Miranda back to Venezuela.
Gili has always maintained that the park in its original state was a perfectly executed masterpiece, any additions being superfluous. The events surrounding
The Lakes raise questions about public art and large projects; post-colonial politics and propaganda, Modernism and aesthetics, the specific history of the park in question, its shipwrecks, mini-Utopias; and failures.
For the first time the artist is using curves in his paintings; teardrops, paisley and foliate shapes set against modulating backgrounds – gestures which reference a very specific story of Venezuelan architectural design and the Lakes contained therein.
The Lakes PV: Monday 7 March 2011
A Riflemaker book will be published to accompany the exhibition.
The Lakes is curated by Robin Mann
Available Works
Download a PDF of available works by Jaime Gili
here.
Jaime Gili 'Ruta Rota' - an installation at 5 Cheapside, London, (St Pauls Tube station) and 250 bus stops across the capital(London Architecture Biennale Route)
RUTA ROTA RUNS UNTIL THE END OF SEPTEMBER
www.londonbiennale.org.uk