Horea Avram
2024The artist’s provocative, dreamlike scenes are rendered in a powerful, lush painting, articulated in either muted grays or sharp contrasts. Keywords: decadence, filmic, oneiric.
The exhibition borrows the famous title of Aristotle's treatise on the soul. For the philosopher, the soul is a principle of life and of movement of living beings. A vital, sensory and intellectual principle. Elements that also guide the works in this exhibition where the living body inhabits the constructed body, where the animal and the baroque, nature and culture meet in bizarre symbioses.
Gheorghe Fikl proposes in this exhibition a critical and ironic look at life in the Anthropocene, at our coexistence with the natural world, at our “becoming-animal”. That is, at the process by which – as Deleuze and Guattari tell us – stability is replaced by anomaly, human inhabitation and centrality is replaced by nomadic flux and transformation. But, in this process of becoming, there is also the transfiguration of the body into flesh, the move from the whole to the disarticulated, at Fikl rendered in dramatic hypostases, where large pieces of meat hang bloodily in opulent interiors.
The artist’s provocative, dreamlike scenes are rendered in a powerful, lush painting, articulated in either muted grays or sharp contrasts. Keywords: decadence, filmic, oneiric. Indeed, at Fikl, the exuberance and excesses of the Baroque meet Buñuel and the absurdity of surrealism, the emotion and neo-expressionist abundant materiality overlap with the organicism and shock effect of Viennese actionism. A natural, personal eclecticism, expressed in a vigorous rhetoric, with theatrical valences and subjective subtleties. Fikl’s worlds, as eclectic as they appear, are in the end possible scenes, as they animate together human, animal, constructed space, lived space.