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Gabriela Giroletti
Breezy -
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Solo exhibitions include (Upcoming), Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London, UK (2022); At Once and a Touch Away, Studio KIND, Braunton, UK (2021).
Group exhibitions include Facing the Sun, Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, Schloss Görne, Germany (2021); The Echo System, Thames Side Studios Gallery, London - curated by Milda Milda Batakyte (2021); WABI-SABI show at Kristin Hjellegjerde Gallery, London, UK (2021); London Now, Space K, Gwacheon, South Korea (2020); Catamaran, Thames Side Studios Gallery (2019), Hix Award, Hix Art Gallery, (2019); Of Course, I Haven’t Forgotten!, Artists.Space, London (2019); Black Stuff, Unit 3 Projects (2019); Annual Summer Show, Unit 1 Gallery Workshop, London (2019); The Nomenclature of Colours, Slade Research Centre (2019), FBA Futures, Mall Galleries, London (2019); Marching Through the Fields, Jeannie Avent Gallery (Warbling Collective), London (2018).
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Highlights and Collections
Giroletti was awarded several prestigious awards including the Desiree Painting Prize in 2018. In the same year, she was the runner up for the Chadwell Award and was shortlisted for the Elephant x Griffin Prize. Giroletti is a 2019 Bloomberg New Contemporaries artist and in 2019/2020 she held a position of a Research Associate at the Slade School of Fine Art.
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Giroletti is interested in the notion of the in-between and the paintings are full of things on a journey from one state of being to another. The landscape undergoes its restless mutation and the forms that inhabit it often seem to be expanding beyond their capacity or deflating as the animating energy leaves them and moves onto something new. Indeed breeziness, the sense of movement in the flickering planes that are to be found throughout the work, is itself an in-between condition; neither windy nor still, Breezy accelerates and decelerates indecisively between the two.
This stirred motion is rendered by layers of translucent directional brushstrokes of varying hues that build into a diaphanous pointillism. In “Heat Haze”, for example, streams of fizzing dots intermingle generating ripples of modulating intensity and in “Spatial Places” these dots throb and scatter like water droplets on a train window. Radiation or gaseousness come to mind, not least when the skies gleam amber orange or sap green.
The smaller works are more fragment-like. They lean towards inert mineral colours, like charcoaled fossils or bits of rock. In paintings like “Tralalitions” or “Last Not Least” the paint is heaped, dug and scraped making the surface seem like part of an excavation. Here, subtle variations of tone poke through the mottled texture, echoing the optical energy of the larger paintings.
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Spatial disjuncture is another theme that underlies the work. In the smaller pieces, devices that are reminiscent of collage techniques, like cuts and fold-ins, are experimented with. In “Some Things Cosmic II” for instance, thick seams appear between the forms, stitching them together into assemblages. Also an adjunct, in the form of a perched mound of paint, materialises on top of the stretcher bar as an extension of a shape within. This causes the painting to flip ambiguously between pictorial space and objecthood.
These experiments get scaled up in the larger works where they evolve further. In “Transparent Things”, for instance, the seams between the forms are accompanied by an overlaid fade and a drop shadow. Both elements have widths that remain constant all the way round, stamping out the edge, emphasising its status as a border. And in “Compass”, dark orbs, that start out by hugging internal thresholds within the picture, escape and re-appear as separate panels on the wall. This melding together of different spaces creates an array of formal possibilities. As we witness the development of the devices from painting to painting, we start to imagine what it would be like if we combined them differently, taking a bit from one painting and placing it on another, like pieces in a board-game.
The use of emptiness in the work also conjures up this sense of possibility. Although Giroletti draws from everyday life when conceiving her compositions, most real-world details are stripped out, leaving the shapes with smooth striated surfaces. Giroletti doesn’t seek to represent the specifics of particular objects so much as the relations between them. This use of voids, cuts and in-between states is what makes the arrangements inherently open and playful. The viewer feels on the verge of stepping into the frame, picking up one of the forms, and participating in the world building themselves.
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Enquire
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Gabriela Giroletti, High Water and Gaps in the Clouds, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Mingling Currents (Joyride), 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Some Things Cosmic, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Spatial Places, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Heat Haze, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Transparent Things, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Compass, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Valley of the Rocks, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Ceiling Gazing (Constellations), 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Like a Whisper, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Tralatitions, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Roots, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Wash, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Last not Least, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Man Mountain, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti, Means of Escape, 2021
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Gabriela Giroletti: Breezy
Past viewing_room