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Echoes of the Past: Devon DeJardin’s Solo Exhibition opens at albertz benda

Devon DeJardin [American, b.1993] Curious Portrait, 2023 Oil on canvas 48 x 36 inches 121.9 x 91.4 cm Devon DeJardin’s Solo Exhibition opens at albertz benda

albertz benda has opened the second solo exhibition with the gallery by Los Angeles based artist Devon DeJardin. In this exhibition entitled Echoes of the Past, the artist has reimagined Old Master portrait paintings, redefining a visual language for the traditional genre.

Devon DeJardin, The way is not in the sky, 2023 Oil on canvas 60 x 76 inches 152.4 x 193 cm

DeJardin’s new paintings are the culmination of five years of his exploration into what the artist terms secular ‘guardians’, who appear as central figures in his compositions. Comprised of geometric shapes assembled into anthropomorphic forms, the guardians have a distinctly modernist feel in their tenuous balance between figure and abstraction: 20th century artists from diverse contexts including Henry Moore, Barbara Hepworth, and Yves Tanguy come to mind as significant inspiration.

Devon DeJardin, Mazarin, 2023 Oil on canvas 30 x 24 inches 76.2 x 61 cm
Devon DeJardin, Always there, 2023 Oil on canvas 30 x 24 inches 76.2 x 61 cm

In Echoes of the Past, the artist delves further back across art historical eras, interpreting his portraits through the lens of Flemish Primitive and Italian Renaissance artists to the Dutch Golden Age and Spanish Romantic masters. While classical portraiture throughout these epochs focused primarily on royalty and pinnacles of society, DeJardin’s paintings conjure imaginary guardians that protect a wounded society.

Devon DeJardin [American, b.1993] Ash, 2023 Oil on canvas 30 x 24 inches 76.2 x 61 cm
Devon DeJardin [American, b.1993]Veil of Power, 2023Oil on canvas72 x 60 inches182.9 x 152.4 cm

The cheerful themes of DeJardin’s earlier work have evolved into a darker, more limited palette, reinterpreting choices by many of history’s greatest artists, including Goya, van Eyck, and Rembrandt. They are conceptual reflections of the era in which the artist has lived as DeJardin’s generation has never known life in a world without war—from the Gulf War and the War on Terror to the ongoing conflicts in the Ukraine and the Middle East. DeJardin metaphorically and physically mines the darkness in society to create his work, using shading and light to subtly tease figures from abstract shapes. The orb-like eyes of his figures appear lighter in tone, signifying a purity of spirit and hope for the future.

As always, his paintings are notable for their meticulous rendering. His figures are so sculptural that they almost seem to emerge from the wall. DeJardin goes straight to the canvas, working without a maquette to depict the figure and background in an organic, liberatory process. In recent years the artist has experimented with framing devices for these figures, including floral, architectural, or landscape imagery. In each of the new canvases, the background corresponds to the era from which the artist reimagined the imagery: six smaller works reflect the intimate and domestic scale of Dutch Golden Age paintings, while two larger vertical works lean on an Italian Renaissance tradition, complete with landscape and drapery surrounding the figures. The show serves as a testament to the enduring power of portraiture as a genre of storytelling, with each painting offering a glimpse into shared human experience across centuries.

Devon DeJardin, Reaching, 2023 Oil on canvas 60 x 60 inches 152.4 x 152.4 cm

Devon DeJardin, Echoes of the past, March 7th, 2024 – April 13th, 2024, albertz benda, NY

About the artist

Devon DeJardin (b. 1993) is a self-taught artist from Portland, Oregon currently working in Los Angeles, Ca. In his adolescent years DeJardin suffered from severe depression and anxiety, finding refuge in painting. DeJardin uses art — and art history — to understand the world and his place in it. With a background studying spiritual traditions from around the world, and an appreciation for the emotional, muscular abstraction of Picasso, Nevelson, Duchamp, and Krasner, DeJardin’s paintings, drawings, and sculpture reference the body, forces of nature, and the application of philosophy to lived experience. With a sense of geometry that is both architectural and organic, and a refined palette that highlights the life of the mind, DeJardin muses on strength, fragility, control, and surrender.

Founded in 2015, albertz benda is a contemporary art gallery with an international program exploring material and textility as well as cultural and social dialogues. Our New York space is host to rotating exhibitions with an emphasis on solo presentations of emerging artists, new research into historic figures, and thematic group exhibitions. In 2021, the gallery expanded to a second location in Los Angeles. Featuring an evolving identity separate from our New York program, the LA space is realized within the context of a domestic setting, advancing new connections between
visual arts, craft, and design. @albertzbenda

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