
When we look at a painting, we usually begin by identifying what it depicts: a figure, a forest, a river, or a familiar landscape. These recognizable subjects provide the initial point of entry, allowing us to construct an understanding of the image before us. Yet as these subjects gradually lose their importance and narrative ceases to occupy the center of our attention, one question emerges: what remains of painting itself?
The works of Rebecca Bernau and Clément Denis are both grounded in recognizable forms. Forests, skies, roads, bodies, and faces are always present, yet they increasingly cease to be the true focus of the work. As their practices evolve, these subjects gradually relinquish their narrative function and no longer serve as the central meaning of the image. Instead, they become points of departure through which colour, light, spatial relationships, brushwork, and pictorial structure emerge as the true subjects of perception.
Rebecca Bernau consistently begins with the figure, though the figure gradually loses its role as portrait. Bodies are repeatedly obscured, erased, fragmented, and reassembled, while contours shift continuously between layers of colour. Rather than emphasizing individual identity, Bernau uses fragments of the human form to construct an ever-changing pictorial structure. Transparency and opacity, blurred edges and lingering traces allow the figure to become increasingly inseparable from the act of painting itself, rather than remaining its subject.
In Clément Denis’s paintings, landscape no longer refers to a specific place. Forests, rivers, and paths dissolve into fields of colour before being reorganized into new spatial relationships. Light is no longer treated as a natural phenomenon but becomes a means of constructing the image itself. Likewise, depth does not arise through conventional perspective, but through the continual advance and retreat of colour. Human figures occasionally appear, yet they function less as narrative protagonists than as devices for organizing space and chromatic relationships.
Although the two artists pursue different paths, they arrive at a remarkably similar condition. In Denis’s paintings, landscape gradually detaches itself from place; in Bernau’s, the figure gradually detaches itself from identity. Their subjects do not disappear, but neither do they remain the destination of our gaze. Instead, they become a medium through which the viewer encounters sensations that resist language.
What Remains does not refer to what has vanished. Rather, it points to that which cannot be carried away by the disappearance of the subject. Once figures and landscapes have fulfilled their role of recognition, what ultimately endures is no longer the reality they represent, but painting itself: relationships of colour, the ordering of space, traces of time, and the lingering presence of the brushstroke. These elements belong neither entirely to reality nor entirely to the image. They continue to exist in the space that painting alone can create. Perhaps this is where painting ultimately distinguishes itself from representation: the subject may recede, but painting remains.





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