Portrait Mode

Portrait Mode

21 Conduit Street London, W1S 2XP, United Kingdom Monday, June 5, 2023–Friday, July 21, 2023

 To coincide with the re-opening of the National Portrait Gallery, Omer Tiroche Gallery is pleased to announce our forthcoming exhibition, Portrait Mode

tiroir by christian boltanski

Christian Boltanski

Tiroir, 1988

50,000–60,000 GBP

monstre vert à double incarnation à fond bleu by robert combas

Robert Combas

Monstre Vert À Double Incarnation À Fond Bleu, 1995

100,000–120,000 EUR

naked man on a sofa by lucian freud

Lucian Freud

Naked Man on a Sofa, 1989

850,000–950,000 USD

la toilette by mai trung thu

Mai Trung Thu

La toilette, 1946

280,000–320,000 USD

red kitty by yoshitomo nara

Yoshitomo Nara

Red Kitty, 1999

1,100,000–1,300,000 USD

champagne kid (sitting) by yinka shonibare

Yinka Shonibare

Champagne Kid (Sitting), 2013

90,000–100,000 USD

bird of paradise by lynette yiadom-boakye

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye

Bird of Paradise, 2009

550,000–650,000 USD

rose nether poetry by lynette yiadom-boakye

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye

Rose Nether Poetry, 2012

1,300,000–1,700,000 USD

To coincide with the re-opening of the National Portrait Gallery, Omer Tiroche Gallery is pleased to announce our forthcoming exhibition, Portrait Mode. Spanning over a century of portraiture, the exhibition aims to illustrate the unwavering fascination and importance of the subject matter. Evidence of this is highlighted in the exhibited works by both Modern and contemporary artists, such as Frank Auerbach, Kees van Dongen, Jean Dubuffet, Lucian Freud, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye. 


Portraiture is one of the oldest motifs in art, with prehistoric and ancient civilisations creating forms in their likeness through a multitude of mediums, from plastered skulls used in Neolithic burial practices, to Egyptian wall carvings. Traditionally, portraits were commissioned by patrons as a means to record their status and achievement, almost always in an idealised and flattering manner. Over the centuries, portraiture has evolved and expanded to include realistic portrayals of sitters and contemporary life. Displays of grandiosity and pomp have given way to humble moments, as seen in Kees van Dongen’s L'Ânier (L'Ânier de Scheveningen), 1912, a tender depiction of the artist’s daughter, Dolly, one of his favourite models. Riding atop a donkey along the beach in Scheveningen, Dolly stares directly at the viewer, head turned as if her name had just been called. Elements of the artist’s iconic fauvist style merge with a pared-back colour palette, painted in such a way to reflect his daughter’s innocence. The portrait reveals van Dongen’s softer side as he captures an intimate memory of a seaside trip. 


Portraiture is more than mere representation – it can highlight the psychology and culture of the sitter, as well as the wider societal context they exist within. Beyond this, portraits can also art function as a vehicle of projection – revealing as much about the viewer as they do the subject. 


British-Ghanian artist Lynette Yiadom-Boakye implicitly understands the potential of the relationship between viewer and subject. Bird of Paradise, executed in 2009, almost one hundred years after van Dongen’s L'Ânier (L'Ânier de Scheveningen), is a stunning example of her renowned capability as a contemporary figurative artist. Referencing the legacy of Old Masters, Lynette inserts her imagined Black figures into the lineage of European academic painting, traditionally an overwhelmingly White canon. The fictional sitter is painted from the artist's imagination in quick, expressive brushstrokes, in her signature sombre colour palette. Part of the Yiadom-Boakye’s Bird series, the sitter wears a ruff around her collar, a recurrent motif in the artist’s oeuvre. It is an element rich with associations, including carnival costumes and sixteenth-century Netherlandish portraiture. With an arresting gaze, the figure’s purposefully ambiguous gender invites the viewer to ask questions: Who are they? How did they come to be? In a world with little mystery left, her portraits are generously liberating. 


Portrait Mode brings together a diverse collection of works that pay homage to the enduring allure and power of portraiture. With works dating back over a hundred years, the exhibition showcases the evolution of the motif and its ability to portray the complexities of the human experience.