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01 February 2025
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Boris Gratry
Boris Gratry, Nightsky, CH
, 2021
31 x 47 x 2 in. (78.7 x 119.4 x 5.1 cm.)
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Boris Gratry
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Boris Gratry, Nightsky, CH
,
2021
Boris Gratry
Boris Gratry, Nightsky, CH
, 2021
31 x 47 x 2 in. (78.7 x 119.4 x 5.1 cm.)
close
Contact the gallery
for more images
Zoom
Medium
Sculpture, modified car hoods, 23.75kt Rosenoble gold leaf
Size
31 x 47 x 2 in. (78.7 x 119.4 x 5.1 cm.)
Price
Price on Request
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Todd Merrill 20th Century and Studio Contemporary
New York
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About this Artwork
Movement
Art of the 21st Century, Contemporary Art
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Description
Boris Gratry’s abstract compositions share as unique a kinship to artists like Richard Serra or John Chamberlain, as they do with raku-ware, a traditional pottery used in Japanese tea ceremonies.
Strongly influenced by conceptual art, specifically the radical Italian art movement Arte Povera, Gratry has devised a primary aesthetic embodied in the fight against consumerism. In transforming auto parts, one of consumerism’s most ubiquitous products, his works are largely improvisational; the outcome of a number of insurgent factors.
Gratry hosts large happenings during which car parts, like hoods and doors, are set on fire and then violently cooled with water. This process of temperature shocking produces a number of reactions, from changing the object’s initial shape to altering its materiality, as well as making it susceptible to rust. Variations in temperature dictate the metal’s initial coloration, which is then allowed to rust before being embellished with gold leaf appliqué.
Essential in Gratry’s work is the appreciation for the imperfection and evolution of each piece. The works could be described as beautifully tortured, but the most substantial artistic decisions are dictated by natural elements – the chemical and physical reaction to the fire, the eventual patina – which are merely coaxed along by the artist. Gratry’s axiom closely follows the Japanese perspective of “wabi-sabi” which is centered around the acceptance of evanescence and imperfection. The alteration of time is perceived as a benefit where the beauty of the patina will add value and charisma to the work of art as well as a unique authenticity.
Furthermore, Gratry’s use of gold leaf to ornament his works, references “kintsugi” the Japanese art of repairing broken pottery with gold, thereby preserving and highlighting the breakage as an essential part of the object’s history. The golden scar is an emphasis for the passage of time, a rebirth as well as the beginning of a new cycle.
Throughout Gratry’s work, an underlying idea of opposing forces challenges our notions of desirability. In using destructive force, an icon of mass-production is made unique; the banal, rendered exciting, simple, and beautiful.
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