Presented by Mark Sanders Art Consultancy

13th – 19th November 2018

Saatchi Gallery, London

The School of Night, held at Saatchi Gallery from 13th – 19th November 2018, will feature exceptional new works by Wolfe von Lenkiewicz, with the highlight being a vast four by ten metre canvas based on Rembrandt’s The Night Watch.

The title of the main painting, and the series as a whole, refers to a quote from Shakespeare, “Black is the badge of hell, the hue of dungeons and the school of night”. The School of Night alludes to a secret society of alchemists centred on Sir Walter Raleigh, Thomas Harriot and Christopher Marlowe, who became key players in the secret alchemical history of England.

Other works in the exhibition include, Christ on the Cross, a haunting crucifixion painted in a subtle palette of ivory and The Anatomy Lesson of Doctor Tulp. A notable painting on display will also be Azazel, which refers to a fallen angel. This is a powerful yet unmistakably unnerving piece is based on Rembrandt’s 1640 self-portrait.

The organic forms in Lenkiewicz’s latest series of paintings feature new elements including gold, crystals and glass. With their Jewel-like hues, refracted colour and iridescent light, these semihallucinatory works create a relationship between surface and interiority which both embellish and obfuscate the originals. In essence, they present an alchemical reaction between the real and the imagined, intersecting the genres of history and the natural world to create a body of work that is both visually arresting and highly original. Embedded in these paintings are oriental ivory carvings, gelatinous forms and deep-sea creatures that when fused with the original masterpieces produce a new and miraculous reincarnation of the originals. As Jules Verne once described Captain Nemo’s submarine, The School of Night series can also be described as ‘a masterpiece containing masterpieces.’

Lenkiewicz’s practice actively engages with the art of the past to invigorate and rejuvenate one’s understanding of what it means to be a painter today. Fellow practitioners working in this key strand of contemporary art, including Glenn Brown and John Currin, represent an established trend that has been developing over the past two decades. This movement subverts the postmodernist myth that we are all caught in a ‘perpetual present’, revealing instead that the art of the past is a living entity that continues to influence our understanding of painting today.

 

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