Sesame is proud
to present “Icon Resistance”,
an exhibition of new paintings by the Latvian
artist Henrijs Preiss.
Taking medieval
and Byzantine religious icons as his starting
point, Henrijs Preiss submerges
the sacred icon into the grit and alienation
of the 21st century. Forced to adapt to contemporary
conditions, Preiss’ icons are rough,
raw, and yet at the same time intricate and
resplendent - spiritual objects for the post-religious
era.
The icon has always been a precious thing,
the worldly embodiment of higher spiritual
values. But where once it was revered and removed,
Henrijs Preiss pits the icon against the grim
realities of post-industrial consumer society.
Faded functionalist architecture; invisible
virtual realities; subliminal consumer branding
- all leave their mark on the 21st century
icon.
The process involves
a fundamental reconfiguration of the basic
elements of the icon as a painting.
Trained as a stage designer in the Academy
system in Latvia, Preiss knows perfectly well
how to set the scene for this drama. Using
geometric mechanisms, subtle sleights of hand
in compositional balance, and colour complexes
honed for maximum visceral and spatial effect,
he purges the icon of its historical baggage
and forces its basic essence – its spiritual
power - to take on a new, abstract shape to
make itself heard amongst the contemporary
clamour.
The resulting works
are reminiscent of Peter Halley’s circuit boards, embedded with
Da Vinci-esque schemata and then physically
eroded as if by the endless stream of city
life. Time-worn and corroded, they feel like
objects lost in and then rescued from the morass
of urban activity. Through it all, though,
Preiss’ reconstituted icons emerge triumphant,
maintaining their integrity and insisting on
the values that the icon historically represented – adapted
to contemporary conditions, but vital and important
as ever.
Henrijs Preiss
trained at the Art Academy of Latvia as a
painter and scenographer from
1992 until 1998, and completed his Masters
at Central St Martins in 2001. Since then he
has been based in London and has exhibited
in London, New York, Berlin and Riga. “Icon
Resistance” will be his second solo exhibition
at Sesame.