Destinies of Stone Faces
Galerie Derouillon, Étienne Marcel, Paris, France, 2022
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Mendes Wood DM, Brussels, Belgium
Solo exhibition
As the story goes, Hercules was born from an affair that Zeus, father of the gods, had with a mortal woman named Alcmene. Zeus’ wife, the goddess Hera, nursed the child unaware that he was her husband’s illegitimate son, and her divine milk gave Hercules his supernatural strength. From the moment Hera realised who the child was, she repeatedly tried to kill him, but when all her attempts proved unsuccessful, she induced a madness in him that caused him to kill his wife and children. To atone for this, Hercules consulted the Oracle of Delphi and the god Apollo, and was finally instructed to spend ten years serving Eurystheus, the king of Mycenae at the time. During this time of servitude, Hercules was sent to perform twelve difficult tasks, or labours, which have since been immortalised throughout the course of art history, from classical art, sculpture and mosaics all the way to Tintoretto and Rubens.
Through a combination of immersive large and small-scale paintings, Kovařík isolates moments from the myth that resonate with his sensibilities and puts them to canvas. Rather than creating a chronologically framed cycle of works that charts the entire story from start to finish, the artist hones in on critical or iconic moments within the narrative, but also offers more intimate and psychologically charged looks at the states of mind of some of the characters in the story.
Using his signature mix of acrylic, oil and sand on canvas, Kovařík breathes new life into this ancient and cautionary tale of heroism and redemption, with the sculptural bodies of his heroes, always constrained by his canvases, frozen in time but alive with a colour palette that stands in stark contrast to the sober, white sculptures of Hercules that line the sculpture halls of antiquities museums around the world.