Timothy Taylor is pleased to present Gabriel de la Mora’s first European solo
exhibition, which will also be the artist’s first at the gallery. The exhibition –
Serial – comprises examples from three new bodies of work.
In the early 1990s, De la Mora's architectural practice started to question
function. Frustrated with the artistic license taken by clients regarding changes
to his designs, De la Mora determined that architecture could never be
reconciled with art, due to the necessity of its service. His subsequent art
practice – spanning the last twenty years – subverts function through
contemplative and systematic modes of enquiry.
For De la Mora, art is neither created nor destroyed, only transformed. The
production of art is a philosophical exercise, realised through the exploration of
ideas via tangible means. The artist collects materials that have been discarded
after their manufactured function ceases to exist, and these form the basis of his
two- and three-dimensional works. Beginning with images, De la Mora ‘defigures’
until works become abstract; often even monochrome. On the other
hand, the presence of a figure regularly exists in works that begin as abstract.
Drawing from artefacts of the ‘everyday’, works serve as records of history and
time.
The three series in this exhibition, along with a logical sequence of production,
contain the concept of serial as a leitmotif: a series of crystals, together or
separated but always joined in a repetitive gesture; and a series of movements
through printing plates that generate a pictorial mark.
In the first two series, discarded rubber blankets and aluminium plates from a
four-colour offset printing press, are repurposed as abstract paintings. Both
rubber and aluminium are used together in the printing process, with the plates
and blankets being reduced in format to eliminate the culpable area each time a
defect is detected. Ultimately, they become unusable and are discarded.
De la Mora retrieves this residual matter and proceeds to classify each piece: by
colour and format, by degree of wear, brightness and opacity. From this archive,
materials are repurposed into final works that uniformly begin with a grid – that
is then subverted with random disruptions and diagonals.
The works in these series explore the various possibilities of painting, where
accidents and waste caused by the mass-printing process generate primary
materials that are later reconfigured. Both the aluminium plates and rubber
blankets are pictorial explorations, containing endless connections with many
authors and art movements of Modern and contemporary painting. The
strongest of these art-historical lineages is via the Duchampian logic of the
‘rectified readymade’. According to Duchamp, this form of readymade can
comprise objects manufactured for some other purpose, re-presented by an
artist as a work of art.
The third series, titled Crystals of Inevidence, is represented in this exhibition
through a site-specific installation. Unlike other bodies of work – where
information from discarded materials is used once the object had fulfilled its
initial function – De la Mora’s new glass coverslips and microscope slides are
rather pre-appropriated; employed as material prior to their intended functional
use. The foundation of these glass compositions is based on seriality and
repetition, where we find endless formal possibilities and where light and shadow
play a key role.
Crystals of Inevidence was first conceived for the exhibition Lo que no vemos lo
que nos mira (What we do not see what looks back at us) curated by Willy Kautz
at the Museo Amparo, October 2014 – February 2015. “Crystals of Inevidence is
a strategy to visualise emptiness, or a poetic opening onto the non-specific
through an apparently meaningless object. This work encourages us to look at
the non-evident (rather than the evident) through a ‘pictorial object’, that is
nonetheless anti-illusionist and transparent.” – Willy Kautz.