27 Warren Street, W1T 5NB, London, United Kingdom
Open: Wed-Fri 11am-6pm, Sat 12-5pm
Fri 27 Nov 2026 to Sat 16 Jan 2027
27 Warren Street, W1T 5NB Gian Manik
Wed-Fri 11am-6pm, Sat 12-5pm
Artist: Gian Manik
Alice Amati presents Gian Manik’s (b. 1985) first solo exhibition with the gallery and in the UK.
Gian Manik is a Naarm-based artist whose practice reveals a dextrous approach to image-making, characterised by an irreverence toward genre and a compulsion to paint. Motivated by processes that destabilise the colonial conventions underpinning historical painting, Manik draws on a visual language shaped by a childhood spent voraciously copying reproductions of Old Master paintings, while remaining indifferent to distinctions between high and low culture. Resistant to traditional stylistic categorisation, his work unfolds as an ongoing investigation into the boundaries of representation, traversing fashion, music, performance and art history.
Central to Manik's practice is a critical engagement with the legacies of Orientalism and the ways in which colonial image-making has constructed racialised, exoticised and gendered identities. Rather than reproducing these visual regimes, he appropriates and unsettles them, reclaiming historical motifs through a contemporary lens informed by diasporic experience and cultural hybridity. His paintings question inherited narratives of power and authorship, exposing the mechanisms through which desire, spectacle and difference have been historically represented.
Queer culture likewise operates as both subject and methodology within Manik's work. His paintings foreground forms of intimacy, theatricality and self-fashioning that resist fixed identities, embracing ambiguity, sensuality and performativity. Through this intersection of queer aesthetics and postcolonial critique, Manik expands the possibilities of painting as a space where histories can be reimagined and dominant modes of representation disrupted.
Entwining abstraction with figuration, his compositions fluctuate between the delicate and the sumptuously excessive, combining preparatory sketches with formalised brushwork. By representing subjects often considered tangential to the canon of painting, Manik complicates and extends the tradition, producing works that are at once historically conversant and insistently contemporary.