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LINSEED 艺术家 | 卢卡斯·莱西特尔 Lukas Leichtle

LINSEED Projects LINSEED
2024-08-31

请点击图片,阅读原文:2021西岸艺术与设计博览会 | 4 SOLOS


展览现场 | 2021西岸艺术与设计博览会
4 SOLOS
卢卡斯·莱希特尔 Lukas Leichtle





卢卡斯·卢齐乌斯·莱希特尔于1995年出生在德国亚琛。他的绘画实践基于重新调整光线感的纸稿和数字图像,遵循意大利文艺复兴时期特别使用的底漆原则,逐层渲染表现出晶莹通透的视觉效果。他的作品病理性地审视现实中温柔脆弱的瞬间,充分利用人造物般的皮肤,变形的肢体语言,戏剧性的聚光和不确定的身份来调动观者的心理反应。


莱希特尔现生活和工作于柏林,并就读于柏林魏森西艺术学院油画专业。他的作品曾展出于上海LINSEED Projects(2021年);安特卫普Newchild画廊(2021年);柏林布鲁克博物馆(2021年);柏林Galerie Sandra Buergel(2021年);伦敦Samuele Visentin(个展;2021年);伦敦Eve Leibe画廊(2021年);柏林Weserhalle(2020年)等。他的作品被北京X美术馆;卡萨布兰卡Fondation Alliances;格斯塔德Alex Hank藏品等收藏。他的作品刊登于《Vogue》《i-D》《福布斯》杂志。他的首次机构个展也将于2023年在新亚琛艺术协会举办。



《4 SOLOS》


唐纳·哈拉维(Donna J. Haraway)曾针对机器与有机身体的二元关系提出质询:“为什么我们的身体应该止于皮肤,或者至多囊括由皮肤包裹着的其他存在物?”在卢卡斯·卢齐乌斯·莱希特尔(Lukas Luzius Leichtle)客观而细腻的笔触下,人体的皮肤呈现出俨然赛博格的质地,加以精心捕捉的柔软瞬间,从而制造出恐惑的悬疑氛围。





卢卡斯·莱希特尔 Lukas Leichtle
《苏雷纳肖像1/2》Recording of Soorena 1/2, 2021
亚麻布面油画,木板装裱 Oil on linen mounted on wood panel
60 x 50 cm


皮肤界定身体的边界,扮演触碰的落点;它也包裹着自我(skin-encapsulated egos),泄露或遮蔽着各种身份。在莱希特尔的画中,其描绘的对象大多被编排在构图讲究的抽象背景下,而这些被冷静观察的裸露身体则显得尤为具象:无论是肌肤的纹理和色泽还是寄生其上的毛发或装饰。在明暗渐变十分细致的油画中,半透明的皮肤不再只是隔绝的屏障;一种内发光混合外反射的表现方式预示着身体成为内外交互的场域。而在纸本中,纸张的肌理使得油彩的高光与非现实的颜色共同模拟出粗糙的漫反射效果。尽管莱希特尔习惯基于平均的数字图像创作,但他参差的笔触却透露出不同材质的表面能够唤起的迥然情绪。





卢卡斯·莱希特尔 Lukas Leichtle

《苏雷纳肖像1/2》Recording of Soorena 2/2, 2021

亚麻布面油画,木板装裱 Oil on linen mounted on wood panel

60 x 50 cm



莱希特尔将绘画和舞台表演视作同一母题,他笔下扭曲的肢体和剧场的聚光为他的人物造型平添了一种戏剧性,这令人想起新客观主义(New Objectivity)绘画中屡见的临床诊断场面。在病理性的凝视下,他审视了竞技台上相互接触侵略的拳击运动。面对这一极具男性气质的互动表演,莱希特尔捕捉到搏击者脆弱、压抑的一面,拳击帽虽然保护了头部却压迫耳廓导致形变。角色的神情被刻意回避,这与《羞耻研习(Study of Shame)》系列中莱希特尔塑造的无脸造型形成呼应。艺术家在这里探讨了“羞耻(shame)”这一动态情感,它在自我认知和社会意识间紧张徘徊。他塑造的裸体形象似乎注意到周遭的侵入性目光,从而在暴露和羞赧间犹豫不安。通过重新阐释这些延宕的裸身,莱希特尔创造性地揭示了羞耻作为身份形塑力量的矛盾状态。


文/林果





卢卡斯·莱希特尔 Lukas Leichtle

《羞耻研习(正面)》Study of Shame (front), 2021

亚麻布面油画 Oil on linen

140 x 110 cm






Lukas Luzius Leichtle (b. 1995, Aachen, Germany) bases his artistic practice on the sketches and digital images after the manipulation of light, and follows the diktat of imprimatura in Renaissance Italy to embody the translucent and luminous effect through gradual layers. In his work, Leichtle has pathologically scrutinised the tender, fragile states between real moments to evoke different uncanniness through his representation of cyborgian skin, deformed body, theatrical spotlights and uncertain identity. 


Leichtle lives and works in Berlin and is currently studying at the painting department of Kunsthochschule Berlin Weißensee. His work has been shown at LINSEED Projects, Shanghai, (2021); Newchild Gallery, Antwerpen (2021); Bruecke Museum, Berlin (2021); Galerie Sandra Buergel, Berlin (2021); Samuele Visentin, London (solo; 2021); Eve Leibe Gallery, London (2021); Weserhalle, Berlin (2020), among others. His work is in the collections of X Museum, Beijing; Fondation Alliances, Casablanca; Alex Hank Collection, Gstaad. His features have been included in Vogue magazine, i-D magazine and Forbes magazine. His first institutional solo exhibition is coming at Neuer Aachener Kunstverein (2023).



《4 SOLOS》


Donna J. Haraway has interrogated the obsolete machine/organism relationships: “Why should our bodies end at the skin, or include at best other beings encapsulated by skin?” In his objective and delicate brushwork, Lukas Luzius Leichtle presents human skin in a cyborgian fashion and captures soft split seconds to stimulate uncanniness in suspense.





Skin defines the partition between beings and their first point of touch. At the same time, it encapsulates egos, revealing or concealing identities. The subject matters Leichtle delineates are composed well against a nearly abstract background, in contrast with the concrete components—no matter the texture and lustre of nudes or the ornaments attached to it—under a self-possessed examination. In his meticulous paintings with an emphasis on chiaroscuro, the translucent skin turns out a porous fabric of liminality more than a separatist shell as its representation assumes a mixed form of outer reflection with inner illumination. In his drawings, due to the paper of coarse grain, the prominent highlights and unreal hues create an effect of diffuse reflection. Although Leichtle tends to work with flat digital images, his uneven strokes suggest the nuanced sentiments that different screens can mirror. 


《4 SOLOS》


Leichtle regards painting in parallel with stage performance. He uses deformed gestures and dramaturgical spotlights to imbue his figuration with a sense of theatricality, reminiscent of the common clinical scenes in New Objectivity paintings. In his pathological gaze, he inspects the physically aggressive boxing, a highly masculine contact sport on the arena, and seizes vulnerable, repressive moments of the fighter whose headgear is protecting the head but fashioning cauliflower ears. Leichtle has hidden the fighter’s facial expression, which echoes with the faceless characters in a series of his paintings titled Study of Shame. Here, the artist investigates “shame”, a dynamic emotion in a tension between self-awareness and social discipline. By reinterpreting the recurrent nude as a vacillating figure who appears to be self-consciously aware of the surrounding intrusive gaze on him, Leichtle sheds new light on the ambivalent state of shame as a shaping force of identity.


Text by Kurt Lin



《4 SOLOS》






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