Open: Mon-Sat 10am-6pm

74 Newman Street, W1T 3DB, London, United Kingdom
Open: Mon-Sat 10am-6pm


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Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?

Pontone Gallery, London

Fri 28 Oct 2022 to Sun 20 Nov 2022

74 Newman Street, W1T 3DB Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?

Mon-Sat 10am-6pm

Artist: Malcolm Liepke


Artworks

Malcolm Liepke, Arms Outstretched, 2022

Oil on canvas

457 × 610 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Back to Back [Redheads], 2022

Oil on canvas

457 × 508 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Couple, 2022

Oil on canvas

508 × 762 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Decisions, 2022

Oil on canvas

254 × 203 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Do You See Me?, 2022

Oil on canvas

356 × 254 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Emerging, 2022

Oil on canvas

1092 × 1270 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Girl on a Stool, 2022

Oil on canvas

356 × 457 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Hand to Mouth, 2022

Oil on canvas

203 × 203 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Hard Times, 2022

Oil on canvas

254 × 254 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Malcolm Liepke In the Dark, 2022

Oil on canvas

1168 × 1575 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Inner Voices, 2022

Oil on canvas

914 × 1219 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Looking Away, 2022

Oil on canvas

35.6 x 30.5 cm 14 x 12 in

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Malcolm Liepke, Napping, 2022

Oil on canvas

254 × 254 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Portrait in Blues and Greens, 2022

Oil on canvas

254 × 305 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Profile in Black, 2022

Oil on canvas

508 × 610 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Red Jumper, 2022

Oil on canvas

584 × 635 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Three Sides of Me, 2022

Oil on canvas

1524 × 1067 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Two Jokers, 2022

Oil on canvas

1067 × 1118 mm

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Malcolm Liepke, Young Man in Stocking Cap, 2022

Oil on canvas

508 × 508 mm

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Installation Views

Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery Installation image for Malcolm Liepke: Do You See Me?, at Pontone Gallery

Malcolm Liepke’s new paintings pulse with life, full of coruscating colour, dramatic composition and seductive evocations of the body. The entire focus and centre of attention is the figure. His subjects are graphically expressed in confident, gestural brushwork that describes form in clots, smears and slicks of sticky, glutinous oil paint.

Liepke works with a cast of characters, young models who act out world weary and self- absorbed scenarios. On occasion they challenge the viewers’ gaze, staring back as if to say “well...and?”. There is an erotic charge to much of this provocation. Some pictures are frank explorations of sensuous male and female appeal. Liepke’s deft handling roils and wallows in his rich colour palette. Exploiting contrast, he throws dense charcoal blacks against pale and livid flesh tones. He deploys a vocabulary of playful and knowing tropes: liquid eyes glisten, mobile fingers touch and cradle, glossy hair coils and tumbles, full lips are moist. Liepke crops his views close, the subject fills the frame, the object is unambiguous.

The artist’s method and content brings Manet to mind. Facility goes hand in hand with gaucheness. Liepke presents contemporary types, playing with the surface appearances of ‘modernity’, who tease with their outward indifference and ostensible blankness. This appears a superficial ‘floating world’ of people doing not very much at all. Nevertheless, it is real, as much as Manet’s ‘demi monde’.

There are some new developments in this set of paintings. A couple of pictures investigate some overtly expressed emotion. ‘Inner Voices’ shows a man on a bed rocking back and forth, his head painted in several positions, angst-ridden and contorted. ‘Hard Times’ documents a troubled state, where another figure, head slumped in hands, is an intimate portrait of despair. Whatever the public face presented, Liepke reaches behind the mask and reveals the question “do you see me”.

Courtesy of the artist and Pontone Gallery, London

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