VEIL

Solo Exhibition, Uitstalling Art Gallery / KUBE Gallery, 2023

MARCEL HABETSLAAN 26, 3600 GENK, BELGIUM

2 July - 1 October, 2023

This collection of Lionel Smit's paintings and bronze sculpture opens on 2nd July.

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Shrouded Intimacy

Essay by Prof Ernst van der Wal, Department of Visual Arts, Stellenbosch University

In gentle folds, shimmering creases and billowing sweeps, we see the body swathed in layers of lush fabric. The veil – an article of clothing that is steeped in historical significance – is used by Smit to contemplate ways in which the human body is revered, admired and protected.

As counterfoil to earlier projects in which Smit explored themes ranging from exposure to the contemporary consumption of manipulated images, Veil showcases a body of work in which he returns to some of his earlier artistic roots and sources of inspiration. Reference is made to the work of Caravaggio and Titian, who used veils to examine and question some of the religious ideas held at the time. Smit plays with the symbolic suppleness that veils have long offered such artists – veils cover, protect and disguise but, in turn, can also be used to suggest, intimate and reveal. We also see allusions to the modelli or cartoons produced by Raphael, who used rough oil sketches to plan and prepare for his larger work. Smit strategically harnesses such stylistic references to acknowledge the richness of the art historical canon from which he continues to draw.  Like overlapping veils, we encounter different histories and practices layered over one another.

In some of his paintings, we see nebulous clouds and dramatic lighting mirroring the theatrical effect of the veil. His sculptural work picks up on some of these qualities with various shapes and textures carefully layered so as to create the illusion of a face in flux. Each of the carefully modulated figures carries their likeness in idiosyncratic traces and marks, with quiet, pensive faces emerging in strips, circles and smudges.

Reveil #1, 2023, oil on linen, 190x150cm

Reveil #2, 2023, oil on linen, 190x150cm

As Paul Hills maintains, shrouds and veils carry sacral connotations that endure within more contemporary environments. Acting as a membrane between different worlds, veils hint at the presence of something or someone that is held in such high regard that some separation is needed to keep the everyday at bay. Veils, Hills contends, are suggestive of intimacy, theatricality and fantasy, and they provide the symbolic material with which we tell stories about our own desires. Veils form part of “a visual culture of performance [and] spectatorship,” as they are “worn, touched, given in dowries, stored in chests, paraded on the person or separated from the body” (Hills 2006: 780). Especially in a European context, customs of veiling are largely associated with ritualised performances of covering and uncovering, disguise and revelation. In this way, veils facilitate movement between states of concealment and exposure. As much as they hide and shield, veils also ask to be seen, touched, and sometimes even lifted.

Sources cited

Paul Hills, 2006. ‘Titian’s Veils’, in Art History. Volume 29, Issue 5.

 
 

 

Uitstalling Art Gallery / KUBE Gallery

Uitstalling Art Gallery / KUBE Gallery deals in a distinctive combination of painting, drawing, and sculpture. The locations for Uitstalling are chosen carefully in the east of Belgium as well as in Poznan, Poland. They are in perfect spots to experience a combination of contemporary art with an intriguing environment. They also offer guests the possibility to experience an extended private collection, including work from Pablo Picasso, Louise Bourgeois, William Kentridge, Gilbert & George, Julian Opie, and Damien Hirst.

For inquiries at Uitstalling Art Gallery / KUBE Gallery:

KUBE Gallery

Danny Weckx
danny@uitstalling.com
+32 (0) 475 32 28 26
Marcel Habetslaan 26, 3600 Genk

Opening hours:
Tuesday - Sunday, 1-5 PM
Closed during installations