Jan Vanriet: The Music Boy

Andrew Graham-Dixon, Martin Herbert, foreword by Charlotte Mullins

Roberto Polo, 2016

38,00

Published on the occasion of the exhibition Jan Vanriet, The Music Boy at The New Art Gallery Walsall 29.01.2016 – 08.05.2016
The Music Boy exhibition at the New Art Gallery Walsall is the artist’s first in the United Kingdom. The exhibition is titled after a quadriptych of paintings depicting the artist’s grandmother and his uncle playing an accordion.
Jan Vanriet’s work mainly concerns the memory of history and the construction of pictorial surface. As Martin Herbert writes: “Vanriet builds up his paintings in layers, and the strata of underpainting have, in his case, a polyvalent quality. In some cases they form glazes that gift the paintings with an internal glow; in others, the half-visible ghosts of earlier paintings both reaffirm the idea that something is being held back, and situate Vanriet’s paintings as a carefully wrought, crafted statement that has gone through stages in order to reach a conclusive point, like a phrase honed through multiple careful edits.”
Jan Vanriet’s mother, father and uncle participated in the Resistance movement and were deported by the Nazis. His parents met in the Mauthausen concentration camp and their stories and memories of the Second World War and its aftermath continue to permeate his paintings. Themes of love, loss, identity, destiny and disappearance pervade his work. And yet Vanriet says: “The starting point may be my family, but I see it as a universal story. I don’t want the themes to be too narrow, too close to me, because they should go wider than that. If not, it is only anecdote and I have not painted well enough.”

Artikelnummer: 12849 Categorie:

ISBN: 9781907363108

168 pagina's, 24 x 29,5 cm, kleurenillustraties, hardcover, Engels