Press Release

TEMPLON is unveiling for the first time in almost two decades the complex oeuvre of one of the most radical African-American artists of his generation: Michael Ray Charles. The In The Presence of Light exhibition, curated by Hedwig Van Impe, features a spectacular series of a dozen unseen paintings and sculptures.

A pioneer in exploring the representation of African-American communities within American history and pop culture, Michael Ray Charles created a sensation when he first emerged on the artistic scene in the nineties. The success of his shows at Tony Shafrazi Gallery in New York (1994 to 1999) quickly led him to exhibit extensively around Europe, including with Hans Mayer in Germany and, notably, Cotthem Gallery in Belgium and Spain. The controversial reception of his work, however, combined with a growing sense of frustration with the American art world led him, with Hedwig Van Impe’s support, to disengage from the public sphere. For close to twenty years, since 2004, the artist has solely focused on his work and research, avoiding all public exposure.

Michael Ray Charles is marking his comeback by turning Galerie Templon’s Grenier Saint-Lazare space into a theatre stage in a reference to minstrel shows, popular 19th-century entertainment when white actors in blackface played black musicians. The new paintings, their colour palette limited entirely to black and white shades, present compositions as striking as they are disturbing. His distorted faces and allusions to the ambiguities of Lincoln or the Ku Klux Klan subvert American popular imagery to challenge the common perception of identity and racial discrimination. A spectacular mother-of-pearl sculpture takes pride of place at the heart of the gallery, like a mysterious jewel. The artist has taken the features of the “black mammy” and placed them on a pedestal in the form of a Confederate monument.

By questioning the power of images, Michael Ray Charles’ paintings do not shy away from provocation as they offer food for thought on the issue of race in a context reshaped by the Black Lives Matter movement.

The exhibition will also be marked by the publication of a book written by Hedwig Van Impe, recounting the extraordinary story of his partnership with artist Michael Ray Charles.

Born in 1967 in Lafayette, Louisiana, USA, Michael Ray Charles currently lives and works in Houston, Texas, USA. He spent most of his youth in California and Louisiana. He studied design and advertising for three and a half years before being awarded a BFA degree in 1989. He went on to obtain an MFA in 1993 at the University of Houston, Texas, before teaching at the University of Texas in Austin. In 2014, he joined the faculty of the University of Houston. His work features in a wide range of public collections, including the Museum of Modern Art in New York, Museum of Fine Arts in Houston, Arizona State University Art Museum and San Antonio Museum of Art in Texas.

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About the Artist

Born in 1967 in Lousiana, Michael Ray Charles created a sensation when he first emerged on the artistic scene in the nineties. Along side his contemporaries Kara Walker or Kerry James Marshall, he was a pioneer in exploring the representation of African-American communities within American history and pop culture. By appropriating some of the most disparaging imagery of the 20th century, his practise subverts the common perception of identity and racial discrimination. Sometimes painful but always deeply political, his multi-faceted works question the power of images. As his friend the film maker Spike Lee put it in a 1997 interview ‘Michael Ray Charles attacks some serious issues and with a deft humour, which is very hard to do. He makes you laugh while he’s killing you. That’s a real artist.’

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Also Exhibiting at Templon

About the Gallery

The gallery was founded in 1966 by Daniel Templon, who was then only 21. It first opened rue Bonaparte, in Saint-Germain-des-Prés in Paris, before moving in 1972 to its current location, rue Beaubourg, in the Marais, close to the Pompidou Center, which opened in 1977. Daniel Templon first gained recognition by exhibiting conceptual and minimal artists such as Martin Barré, Christian Boltanski, Donald Judd, Joseph Kosuth, Richard Serra. In the seventies and eighties, Daniel Templon was one of the pioneers of the contemporary art and introduced many important American artists to the French public: Dan Flavin, Ellsworth Kelly, Willem de Kooning, Frank Stella, Andy Warhol. The gallery quickly became one of the references in contemporary art in France. In 1972, Daniel Templon and Catherine Millet co-founded the monthly art magazine ART PRESS.

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28 rue du Grenier Saint-Lazare
Paris
France
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Paris 28 rue du Grenier Saint-Lazare
Templon
28 rue du Grenier Saint-Lazare, Paris, France
+33 185 765 555
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Opening hours
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