Tony Bechara

Tony Bechara

508 West 24th Street New York, NY 10011, USA Thursday, January 11, 2024–Saturday, February 17, 2024


Lisson Gallery is pleased to present the first solo exhibition at the gallery with New York based painter Tony Bechara (b. Puerto Rico, 1942). The exhibition will present a selection of brand new acrylic paintings formulated by the random placement of 28 colors in quarter-inch squares covering the canvas, a method developed by the artist over the past 5 decades.

Tony Bechara’s dynamic, color-saturated paintings create a pure field of physical perception. Each canvas is meticulously painted with multicolor areas of quarter-inch squares. Using strips of masking tape, Bechara arranges carefully formulated hues into a playful and invigorating optical surface, made up of a multitude of small colored units. The work’s overall rhythm is determined by a process that is systemic but designed to allow combinations of color to emerge by chance. Bechara cites influences across art history, including the colors of Matisse and Vuillard, the pointillism of Seurat and Signac, traditions of weaving and crafting, the precision of hard-edge abstraction, and the famed Byzantine-era mosaics at Ravenna. These influences are evidenced in Bechara’s approach to painting: he uses a tile-like grid as the basis for his explorations into the principles of color usage, particularly the intersection of organization and randomness. The division of the surface of the painting into small modular boxes is similar to pixels; the gaze is constantly in motion. Bechara presents the viewer with their retinal and neurological relationship to color, balancing one’s immediate impression of hue and the overarching logic of pattern.