Francis Ruyter “Let Us Now Praise Famous Men”

Space. From 05 Apr, 2018 to 26 May, 2018

Francis Ruyter presents in this new occasion a series of paintings in which he use historical photographs as the basis for its creation.


Opening:05 Abr, 2018

Professional visitors:05 Abr, 2018

Opening to public:05 Abr, 2018

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The title of the present exhibition Let Us Now Praise Famous Men refers to the book of the same name written by James Agee and illustrated with photographs by Walker Evans. Published in 1941, it documented rural life in the United States during the Great Depression of the 1930s. Francis Ruyter uses appropriationism as a tool; all the paintings have as reference photographs of the huge patrimony treasured by the Library of Congress of the United States. It is one of the largest archives in the world created from the funds of the Farm Secure Administration and the Office of War Information: black and white images that portray the life of the Americans between 1935 and 1944. These images, produced through gubernamental agencies, transcend the propaganda and, at the end, have become a reference for the American identity. It is a file reviewed by multiple authors with a generative character as it is digitized and disseminated.

The archival objects of the post-industrial era have already been subjected to systems of order and reclassification and lately they are divided in a global scheme through the Internet. The growing presence of data banks, image files and visual interfaces allow us to trace Ruyter’s interest in photographic archives. This can be compare with technological ruins that face the changes of the scientific and social knowledge that provides Ruyter’s paintings a contextual depth of referents connected by interrelated nodes.

The artistic process of Francis Ruyter merges new technologies with traditional techniques of drawing and painting. Ruyter uses monochrome paint and permanent marker to recreate the images of these photographs. These works deployed visually as abstract paintings despite their figurative origin. We are faced with synthetic works with a marked tone reduction, painted with non-naturalistic colours at all, and composed of energetic colour planes. This saturated chromaticism comes violent in conflict with our perception of the photographic act as a graphic document that brings verisimilitude to the image. The contours divide the surface into planes of shadows clueless in a representation in which the illusion of depth is eliminated. This denial of the volume reduces to the minimum expression the photographic origin of the image as the language of light and emphasizes the markedly two-dimensional character of the work.

 

Exhibition view, Let Us Now  Praise Famous Man, galeria SENDA 2018
Exhibition view, Let Us Now Praise Famous Man, galeria SENDA 2018
Exhibition view, Let Us Now  Praise Famous Man, galeria SENDA 2018
Exhibition view, Let Us Now Praise Famous Man, galeria SENDA 2018
Exhibition view, Let Us Now  Praise Famous Man, galeria SENDA 2018
Exhibition view, Let Us Now Praise Famous Man, galeria SENDA 2018
Francis Ruyter,Arthur S. Siegel: Detroit, Michigan. Scrap collected for salvage at a rally sponsored by the WPA (Work Projects Administration) at the state fairgrounds, 2014, Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 130 cm
Francis Ruyter,Arthur S. Siegel: Detroit, Michigan. Scrap collected for salvage at a rally sponsored by the WPA (Work Projects Administration) at the state fairgrounds, 2014, Acrylic on canvas, 100 x 130 cm
"Ann Rosener: San Francisco, California. Pile of salvaged tin cans at the metal and thermite Company. In the foreground are cans of a type which cannot successfully be detinned", 2017 Acrylic on canvas 122 x 152,5 cm
Francis Ruyter,
Francis Ruyter, "Arthur S. Siegel: Detroit, Michigan. Scrap collected for salvage at a rally sponsored by the Work Projects Administration (WPA) at the state fairgrounds", 2018, Acrylic on canvas, 122 x 152.5
Francis Ruyter, “Ann Rosener: Salvage. Farm scrap. Hay rakes, farm wheels, hot-water tanks and auto springs long past their prime are contributed by Michigan farmers to the scrap-collection drive. All the scrap metal which America's farmers can no longer use, will be put to immediate and vital use in the war effort”,  2018, Acrylic on canvas, 120 x 160 cm
Francis Ruyter, “Ann Rosener: Salvage. Farm scrap. Hay rakes, farm wheels, hot-water tanks and auto springs long past their prime are contributed by Michigan farmers to the scrap-collection drive. All the scrap metal which America's farmers can no longer use, will be put to immediate and vital use in the war effort”, 2018, Acrylic on canvas, 120 x 160 cm
Francis Ruyter,
Francis Ruyter, "William Perlitch: Automobile salvage. When the scrap is sorted, powerful electric cranes load it into freight cars--each type and grade in a separate car. The crane transfers the scrap from the sorted pile to the car in a matter of moments. To conserve railroad car space and time, each car is completely filled before it is shipped", 2017, Acrylic on canvas, 152.5 x 122 cm
Francis Ruyter,
Francis Ruyter, "Paul Vanderbilt: Manayunk, Pennsylvania. Part of an automobile junk yard on Ridge Avenue", 2018, Acrylic on canvas, 192 x 351 cm