The films, paintings, and drawings by Belgian artist Michaël Borremans (born 1963) engage the viewer with stilled images rendered in a precise and exacting style. His seductive works contain timeless images that capture what has been described as "the inner drive and external force-the latent pressures-involved in being human." His figures perform common rituals and simple gestures, though they are set within an environment shrouded in mystery or ambiguity. His intensely atmospheric images are puzzles that oscillate in a fragile way between inexorable realism and nebulous distance.
Michaël Borremans's exhibition is one of six exhibitions focused on the metaphysics of the human figure grouped under the title ‘Looking for the Face I Had Before the World Was Made'. The artists include: Michaël Borremans, Samuel Beckett, Eric & Heather ChanSchatz, Lorraine O'Grady, A. G. Rizzoli and William Stockman. Each of the artists explores how depicting the human figure can offer something more consequential than a simple catalogue of physical features. Each work in the exhibition tells a human story while de-emphasizing the likeness of any particular person. Using a wide variety of styles, the artists are joined by an interest in creating a sense of a phenomenon deeper than the surface image, capturing a presence prior to the appearance of the fully formed individual. The line ‘Looking for the face I had before the world was made' is a quote from the late poet and dramatist William Butler Yeats, from his poem ‘A Woman Young and Old'. It can be understood as either a statement of faith or a philosophical riddle related to the formation of the self.
Opening Friday Jan 29, 6-10 pm
In MCA DENVER, 1485 Delgany St, Denver, CO 80202. Tuesday-Sunday 10 am-6 pm. The exihibition is scheduled till March.
www.mcadenver.org