Are you wasting away at your skin II
Are You wasting away at your skin III
Wasting away
'hanging from your internal script
Come apart or you will go blind II
Come apart or you will go blind
untitled
'untitled
I know a place not far from here
"the infectious disease of the almost living IV"
'the infectious disease of the almost living III"
My self in the shine of your lenses
The infectious disease of the almost living
The infectious disease of the almost living II
"caro camur"
"untitled"
"untitled"
"which way to happy which way to hell"
"you'll come apart and you'll go blind"
"infinite nonsense I"
"are you wasting away at your skin III"
 
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Paul Le Tallec

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Paul Le-Tallec's work is about the existential anxiety of modern life. Drawing from feelings about reality he attempts to reflect the nervous system or the ‘self' as closely as possible through the construction of suggestive forms. He pulls experimental compositions together using regurgitated digital print and paint while holding on strictly to an initial idea and its meaning.

His practice celebrates the importance of living today through direct emotional beliefs, challenging common perceptions on mortality, religion, honesty and failure, often reflecting the vulgarity of mankind and the blind movement of the masses. It is important to strip away pomposity and falseness to attack convention. He is far more interested in making imagery as honest as possible rather than worry about the balance of aesthetics. By striving to achieve a claustrophobic element within the work itself, an over indulgence then has to be restricted, reflecting both our social and political structures today.

By incorporating scans of his body itself the flesh becomes an important material. He is interested in the physical reality of our existence, often asking 'what is it to be human'. Conflict and contrast exist between the representative element and the formally constructed within his compositions, the process of resolving this is an important part of his work.

In a recent interview he said "Today, most of us rush around as if there is no more to life than making a living. We certainly don't think about dying. We need to be more conscious of our existence. Only if we see ourselves as we really are will we begin to live".

 

Exhibitions

2010 Butler Goode Gallery

2010 Art Sydney

2009 Cambridge Galleries UK

2009 London Art UK

2008 London Art Fair UK

2008 International Mini Print Exhibition UK

2008 Cambridge Galleries UK

2007 Vancouner Art Gallery Canada

2007 Art Gallery of Ontario Canada

2007 Mall Galleries UK

2007 London Art UK Collections

2007 Analysis Mason Group

2007 Bruce Mau

2007 Addenbrookes NHS Hospital

2007 Anglia Ruskin University

2007 Tait Limited

 
 

 

        Contact Gallery

         374 Crown Street Surry Hills Sydney

m: +61 (0)416 186 062
e
  info@butlergoodegallery.com

 

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