RYAN MOSLEY

Verses in Time

17 January – 15 February 2020

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Everything you need to know about them is right there, humming on the surface: trippy, funny and melancholy, these are virtuoso hallucinations in a high-keyed palette…Mosley’s canvases are populated by merry turncoats, bewildered mystics and mournful minstrels, all coming or going or mutating into something or someone else…Many of them appear to be searching for something, be it salvation, a god or a good time…Like out-takes from fairy tales, the works have a narrative thread buried deep beneath their surfaces, but if you’re after a beginning, a middle and an end, then you’re bound for disappointment: nothing so straightforward exists here.

Jennifer Higgie, Frieze Magazine

Larsen Warner is very pleased to present Verses in Time, Ryan Mosley’s (b. 1980, Chesterfield, UK) first solo exhibition in Sweden. This coincides with Mosley’s inclusion in the major institutional exhibition Radical Figures: Painting in the New Millenium, at the Whitechapel Gallery, London opening in February 2020.

There has been a renewed interest in experimental modes of figuration among painters who have come to prominence in the last 15 years. Mosley, alongside other artists of his generation such as Michael Armitage, Nicole Eisenman, Dana Schutz and Tschabalala Self to name a few, has created an expressive mode of figuration that builds on, challenges and expands the canonical Western painting tradition. Presenting new paintings and works on paper, Verses in Time sees Mosley continuing to radically experiment with the known tropes of figurative painting and portraiture, skilfully creating paintings that embody their own contradictions and play with the audience’s perception of both fact and imagination.

Art historical and literary motifs frequently inform the merry assortment of characters threaded through Mosley’s paintings from Degas and Manet, Picasso and Léger. Ghosts of painters past elusively gather under the surface but his work is no mere homage. What he manages to create in his sumptuous works is an utterly unique contemporary experience steeped in painting history but never controlled by it, providing a sly nod to the past while constantly presenting an art wholly of our time. While moving among the works in the exhibition you can see Mosley’s extraordinary, subtle, kaleidoscopic sense of colour.  By overlaying thin washes Mosley elegantly manages to create a surface that almost glows, conjuring the stage for his mesmerising world. Bright stains of neon pinks or incandescent orange often pulsate beside shadowy swathes of aubergine purples and greens with the dark charcoal of the drawing occasionally peeping from below.

Mosley’s visual universe is populated by an array of fantastical characters from harlequins and cabaret dancers, bearded musicians to unknown travellers. These oddball protagonists come together in delightfully inexplicable narratives that evoke a carnival world of surreal nightlife and macabre theatre. Although many of these characters are rooted in every day observation each one springs from the artists own imagination with many appearing recursively throughout Mosley’s work and thus taking on a lived quality.  Verses in Time presents an artist continuing to push the notion of what figurative painting can be and contributing to its increasing relevance in the 21st century.

Ryan Mosley (b. 1980, Chesterfield, UK) Selected solo exhibitions include A Planets Revolution, Galerie EIGEN + ART, Berlin, Germany (2019); Rival Poets, Galerie Mikael Andersen, Copenhagen, Denmark (2019); Under Moon, Tim Van Laere Gallery, Antwerp, Belgium (2018); Anatamy of the Wall, Alison Jacques Gallery, London, UK (2016); Band of None, Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, Los Angeles, USA (2014). Mosley’s works have been included in numerous group exhibitions including Radical Figures: Painting in the New Millenium, Whitechapel, London, UK (2020); Drawing Biennial 2019, Drawing Room, London, UK (2019); The Walls Have Ears, Aston Hall Museum, Birmingham, UK (2018); INTER YOUTH, Museum of China Academy of Art, Hangzhou, China (2017); PAINTERS' PAINTERS, Saatchi Gallery, London, UK (2016); Bühnenreif / 1. Akt (1900 - 2016), Arp Museum Bahnhof Rolandseck, Remagen, Germany (2016); One Day, Somthing Happens: Paintings of People, Leeds Art Gallery, Leeds, UK; Hayward Touring & Arts Council exhibition, UK (2015); June: A Painting Show, Sadie Coles HQ, London, UK (2015); 100 Painters of Tomorrow, Beers Contemporary, London, UK (2014); Nightfalls, MODEM Centre for Modern and Contemporary Arts, Debrecen, Hungary (2012); London Twelve, City Gallery Prague, Prague, Czech Republic and Museum of Modern Art, Baku, Azerbaijan (2012); Newspeak: British Art Now, Saatchi Gallery, London, UK, Hermitage, St Petersburg, Russia and Art Gallery of South Australia (2009-2011). His work can be found in numerous major institutional and private collections including Milwaukee Art Museum USA, Arts Council Collection UK, Burger Collection Germany, Saatchi Collection UK, Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design USA, The Box UK, Graves Gallery UK, and Royal Albert Memorial Museum UK.