Press Release

Modern Art is delighted to announce an exhibition of paintings by René Daniëls, his third with the gallery. The seven paintings, most of which have never been exhibited, span the formative period of 1980 to 1984, prior to and prefiguring the development of his signature ‘bowtie’ motif. Early works from this period are mainly figurative, notably loose in brushwork, and made up of several layers often revealing traces of underpaintings. Superimposed figures appear as dreamlike apparitions, floating over the canvas and dissolving into inanimate objects. Together this body of work shows how Daniëls used mysticism, ceremonial rituals, as well as woodland and jungle environments as iconography to probe the lexicons of art history and mechanisms of the art market.

Art itself has been the subject of his paintings throughout his oeuvre; what defines an artwork, how it is interpreted, exhibited - and most poignantly - how it is assigned value. Daniëls often worked cyclically, returning to certain compositions repeatedly, changing small details with each new work. Every iteration shows him ushering his subjects’ transition toward an unknown destination. His urge for transformation is especially evident in De fontein in Afrika, a painting he reworked after it was originally exhibited in 1984. The outline of a giraffe is overlayed by the pattern of its skin; only visible in the brown segments left translucent. The painting fuses different perspectives: the foreground with the background, and the sign with its interpretation. He found “objects and ideas always appear twice, once as a reality and later as the idea for a work.” These foundational paintings give insight into an artist who sought to refine his pictorial language through developing an interconnected web of double entendres and multilingual puns.

For Daniëls, Edgar Allan Poe, Marcel Duchamp, René Magritte, Marcel Broodthaers and Francis Picabia are key lodestars for their “lucidity of unique thought.” In a similar tongue-in-cheek way to these artists, Daniëls offers institutional critique through dark humour, metonymic wit, and radical self-awareness. Charting a course independent from his peers, Daniëls’ oeuvre has received multiple recent revisionist appraisals including surveys at Camden Art Centre in 2011, Museo Reino Sofia (2011-2012), and WIELS, Brussels and MAMCO, Geneva (2018-2019). At a time of heightened commercialisation of the art world, his spirit of experimentation and humour undercut by a deep belief in painting lives on in the younger generations of artists working today.

Born in Eindhoven in 1950, where he continues to live and work, Daniëls studied at the Royal Academy of Arts and Design in Hertogenbosch and from 1983-84 attended the studio program at MoMA PS1, New York. He participated in numerous international exhibitions throughout the 1980s, among them Zeitgeist (1982), documenta 7 (1982), and the 17th Bienal de São Paulo (1983). He resumed drawing in the 1990s, and painting in 2006. In recent years, his work has been the subject of several major presentations including a 2010 survey of his work at Camden Art Centre, London in 2010, a 2011-12 survey at Museo Reina Sofia, Madrid, and the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven; and the 2018 exhibition Fragments of an Unfinished Novel at WIELS, Brussels, which travelled to MAMCO, Geneva, the following year. Daniëls’ works are held in collections including the Art Institute of Chicago; the Groninger Museum, Groningen; Kunstmuseum Den Haag, The Hague; Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg; Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen, Rotterdam; the Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam; the Städel Museum, Frankfurt; S.M.A.K., Ghent; Tate, London; the Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven; and the Walker Art Center, Minneapolis.

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About the Gallery
Modern Art is a London based gallery opened by Stuart Shave in 1998.

In 20 years the gallery has occupied six locations in east and central London, presently being homed across two London spaces; a converted 5,000 sq ft pre-war factory building in the Clerkenwell area of central London and a 6,000 sq ft space on Vyner Street, in East London. The gallery has continued to present concurrent exhibitions in both spaces. Each year Modern Art participates in art fairs in Basel, Hong Kong, Miami, London, Los Angeles and San Francisco.

The gallery has a diverse intergenerational and international programme. Modern Art’s intention is to assist artists in the development of their practices and the creation of new work by fostering relationships between artists, institutions, collectors, curators, and audiences. Artists represented by Modern Art participate in exhibitions at the highest international level with museums, foundations, biennales and collections.
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London 7 Bury Street
Modern Art
7 Bury Street, London, United Kingdom
+44 (0) 20 7299 7950
http://www.modernart.net

Opening hours
Wednesday – Saturday
11am – 5pm
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