| Translated
from Spanish, unedited quote
Canadian
artist Antoine Gaber revisits the impressionism of the French
Masters in appropriation- common in Contemporary Art- of an
important era of Art History.
However,
Gaber differs from other artists who assimilate into their
works classical illustrations to transform them into icons;
he goes back to scenes or images preserved in memory (Monet’s
Nympheas), a tribute to enduring works that have dramatically
transformed the conception of art.
In his
work, there is something more than sheer references to paintings
of 19th century artists who refuse to copy the mimetic form
of reality in order to capture the impression sketched by
the projection of daylight on objects: Antoine Gaber is looking
to incite a transformation for the viewer who relies on the
power of contemplation.
We all
know that impressionism broke the notion of art as an objective
representation of reality. The idea of a still world shifts
to seize the impression that it stimulates in the viewer’s
eye. The brushes capture the forms through the ever-changing
sifter of light trying to freeze the perception of pure instant
of any distinct landscape scene of any place on earth subject
to the passing of hours.
Gaber
stretches this shifting of axis of the representation accomplished
by the impressionists as the painting crosses the eye of the
onlooker and places itself at the visual threshold of the
inner transformation. His painting includes the notion that
contact with what is seen has the power to alter the inner
state of the viewer who absorbs the painting like the Zen
artist who paints a scenery on the wall of his cell and thinks
he can escape by going through it.
Speaking
of this perspective, we can see a characteristic of his creative
development, which is also a growing tendency in Contemporary
Art: the desire to purify, (cure, relieve) the spectator.
Being consumed by what we see is the preamble to all cures
by an art that emerges from light projected over all existing
things.
The terminology
Healing Art is still a difficult concept to handle as his
meaning goes beyond that of art, a term also used to define
the well being felt by someone through art. Another thing
is Antoine Gaber’s creative process that leads to an
art conceived to cure those who discover its virtue.
Whether
it’s “The Scream” of Munch, the powerful
figures of a hallucinated and desperate Basquiat in Manhattan,
or the canvases of Andrés Serrano stained by his own
bodily fluids; just to mention a few, we come to realize that
there is a strong tendency in Contemporary Art to mirror an
insane world. This other Art that doesn’t look to reflect
today’s ills but to cure the soul (and the body) of
anyone caring is more unusual and deserves our attention.
The creative process that makes use of the curative function
is less known and never had the benefit of a theoretical approach.
Thus, the significance of this artist is something to be reckoned
with.
In his
childhood, Antoine Gaber watched his uncle paint with amazement.
He was also fascinated by photography. He couldn’t get
over the fact that some sort of magic process could fix an
image of the world for eternity. This would incite him to
take numerous photos and put up a dark room that he transformed
into a studio where he would shot artistic portraits and developed
photos of scenery that were already for him a reason for peace.
“Infiltrate
nature gave me the impression that time had stopped and allowed
me to communicate with God, and appreciate the beauty of the
created world around me”.
Even though some decades went by before this experience opened
on painting, Gaber had captured the intensity of the moment
when his eyes “see” a mixture of colors in the
scenery which is, in his own way, the perfect reflection of
the impression whenever the soul reaches the precious instant
that condenses eternity.
It’s
been 12 years now since he started painting as a self-made
artist, studying the works of the Masters impressionists,
the ecstasies of the light reflected on a scale ranging from
red to purple. On his canvas, black is absent, but there are
plays of light and shadows, and his painting keep expressing
the liberation that all beautiful things are produced in the
soul.
If the
impressionist movement inspired freedom of style and shares
with expressionism the connection between the pictorial process
and the inner feeling; Gaber adds to the mix the volition
of obvious contemporary artists like Lygia Clark as he is
trying to get the viewer’s attention. Even though he’s
not into building sculptures or “creatures” like
this Brazilian who confers the status of Art to curative processes
and who invited the spectator to interact with her works;
Gaber paints sceneries to gain access to the spectator’s
inner self.
His art
is provocative but at the other end of the transgression -
so characteristic of an art that emerges from a disintegrated
society like ours- as his intention is not to perturb the
perception but to mix colors and forms to appease the spectator
who is also, in his own way, a patient. This function is not
unlike those works that have altered the limits of art like
the unforgettable performances of Joseph Beuys presenting
his own personal healing process, although Gaber’s style
refers to an ancient artistic tradition.
But never
has it been understood like now that the power of re-actualization
has everything to do with the use of the artistic object.
The impressionist sceneries a la Monet are in a way “found
objects” that Gaber uses as a new function linked to
his agenda: healing. “Liberate people is the soul of
art”, said Beuys.
As a cancer
researcher dedicated to the evolution of new medicines, Antoine
Gaber knows what human suffering is and especially suffering
caused by destructive cells. It’s almost that natural
in tone with the pharmaceutical research and the fascination
radiating from Monet’s style, he tries to use the vast
concentration of light and enthusiasm to paint sceneries which
invite the spectator to a distinct reality from that of his
troubled body: spaces reminding him that somewhere in the
world (and inside him) there is absolute peace and there are
colors executing the subtle dance of harmony.
After the meticulous technical study in the making of Degas’
L’orchestre, Gaber revisited Le modèle, one of
the best-known works of Tamara de Lempika, the famous Art
Deco artist. Although it was the first time he ventured out
of impressionism, this pictorial work- helping the launch
of a new drug against cancer reveals the deep sense of his
art: the shared compassion of human suffering.
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Antoine
Gaber ,technical study in the making of Degas’
painting "L’orchestre"
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Gaber
revisited "Le modèle", fromTamara
de Lempika
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The
woman covers part of her face with her arm and unlike the
perfectly nude breast of the original; the astute eye will
note that on Gaber’s model, a surgery has modified her
size, that the arm is longer than normal, collateral effect
of this kind of operation. The barely visible mutilation of
the body produces an emotional charge in the woman who feels
the stigma of the disease. Gaber knew how to capture the deep
sense of this drama.
This same
feeling of compassion linked to aesthetic considerations presided
over the philanthropic program "Passion for Life"
that Gaber launched in 2004 to finance cancer research with
the sale of his works. The "Lorenzo il Magnifico"
award for his social contribution and his artistic
initiative not only meant personal recognition but the adhesion
of 13, 000 artists from all over the world, willing to support
this initiative patronized by the Biennale of Florence.
Gaber likes touring the Seine River around Giverny and bring
his oils to where Monet and other impressionists had painted
their vision of the world; he knows he’s back home on
the same premises that have inspired his Masters. He also
has the certitude to convey this antidote against suffering
which is the connection with the infinite instant when the
light illuminates the scenery.
The golden
hue casts a veil over "Forest Path" creating a kingdom
that the spectator would never want to leave, but also a series
of twilights and moments like "Daydreaming Young Girl
in the Garden "provoke, by the subtlety of the brush
strokes, hues that capture the light to the point of creating
the illusion of the sun on the skin. The experience of communion
with beauty is basically the return of the lost unity.
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Forest
Path, Early Morning 1, 2000
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Daydreaming
Young Girl in the Garden, 2000.
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Antoine Gaber has a generous agenda: create in the midst of
a turbulent world; a threshold where one would feel hypnotized
enough to escape, not to get lost, but to find his own self.
The gripping experience of a patient crying in front of his
sceneries and that the mere fact of looking at them could
be part of his healing process and to feel united with the
universe is hard to describe. In the inner self of the researcher
and the artist- there’s a coexistence here- there is
an intention: reestablish the beauty of the universe.
“I don’t
try to outdo Monet. I mention Monet and his style to create
serenity and to re-establish an emotional balance”.
Confronted to his work, the spectator’s experience is
closely linked to the sacred. There’s a door in his
painting leading to that “other shore”, that we
can only see from the rationally indemonstrable poetic experience.
The possibility to cure the soul of civilization implies the
long forgotten expression of the modern blindness: recreate
the beauty of the universe made by God through an art that
draws its strength from the mystery that binds all things.
Antoine
Gaber also paints flower sceneries. Some say that they are
the only things left from the paradise. Trying to recreate
it is the artist’s supreme task.
Adriana
Herrera Téllez, Miami, Florida
January
2006
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