ScreenshotImage courtesy of Karolina Maria Dudek.

‘Losing The Image’ by Karolina Albricht

Taking its title from Phyllida Barlow’s words, Albricht’s  second solo exhibition at JGM Gallery encourages its  audience to consider paintings as active environments,  which both evade definition and illicit novel  interpretations on each viewing. In Barlow’s case, the  phrase, ‘losing the image’, refers to the particular way in  which the viewer experiences a three-dimensional object  as they move around it. For Barlow, the sculpture’s image  exists in a state of flux. 

For Albricht, however, as a painter, absolute distinctions  surrounding object and image become blurred. The  paintings’ surfaces often accumulate thick layers of paint  of varying tonalities. Others emerge through subtle glazes.  Regardless of how the mark is made, the paintings seem  to exist not only pictorially but also three-dimensionally.  Interested in the body, its movement, and the space it  occupies, Albricht transfers these relationships into a  pictorial field. As such, the materiality of the surface  becomes an experience – an event – both for the artist  and viewer, which recalls the idiosyncrasies of the hand  that made it. 

Karolina Albricht
Single Interval of a Fourth, 2023
Oil on panel
30cm x 24cm

In many of the smaller works from this exhibition,  compositional elements extend beyond the confines of the surface and its border. These protrusions further challenge the definition of ‘the painted image’, instead recalling practices reminiscent  of sculpture or collage. Offering varying perspectives from which they can be viewed and functioning simultaneously as both object  and painting, Albricht’s works present us with a multiplicity of readings. The ambiguity of the surface challenges the urge of mimetic  imperative: Albricht deconstructs form into shifting fields of colour, light and space, which meet with an angled precision and introduce  a certain geometry. Yet, rather than possessing the geometrical severity of minimalism, the rhythmic nature of the marks, the fluidity of  the paint and organic extensions of the picture plane, diffuse any sense of graphic regularity. 

Central to the attraction of Albricht’s work, in the words of Jennifer Guerrini-Maraldi, is “… an aesthetic and stylistic originality that  distinguishes Karolina as an artist of great courage and daring.”

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‘Losing The Image’ An exhibition of paintings by Karolina Albricht.

10 September to 19 October 2024