top of page

Artist of the Day | Jean-Pierre Roy


Jean-Pierre Roy - Conjoiner 2

Jean-Pierre Roy

Conjoiner 2,

2016

Oil on canvas

46 × 35 in

 

Born in Santa Monica, California in 1974, Jean-Pierre Roy is a Brooklyn-based artist. Jean-Pierre received his MFA from the New York Academy of Art in 2002 and was awarded a one-year fellowship from the school. He has participated in numerous group exhibitions in the US and Europe and has had solo museum exhibitions at the Torrence Museum of Art in Los Angeles and the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art in Virginia Beach. His work has been reviewed in The New York Times, Art in America, New American Paintings, The Chicago Tribune, The Seattle Stranger, Hi-Fructose and many other publications. He is the co-creator of Single Fare, an annual NYC art event that has been covered by The New York Times and Wall Street Journal. His work is in the collections of Anita Zabludowicz, Jereann Cheney, Beth Rudin DeWoody, Jean Pigozzi, Leonardo DiCaprio and Bjorn Borg, amongst others. He currently teaches painting at the New York Academy of Art.

Artist Statement

“My work is often associated with Science Fiction, and the Post-Apocalyptic. While the genre narratives, that create this continuity of ideas have had a huge impact on my visual memory, I have never really been that interested in the superficial signifiers of alien technology, space battles and blasted wastelands. For me, the pull of the fantastical has always been the promise of ‘When you enter through these doors, your existential understanding of the nature of things will be questioned.’ It is that promise, and the examination of it, that has been the unifying thread in all of my work.

I have always been obsessed with the reductive investigation of natural systems and their visual replication, not for purely mimetic ends, but from a deep fear that I could not have any predictable interaction within a given system without first knowing all the forces at work in it. Previous work often focused on sublime optical phenomena and massive cataclysmic events as they present situations where the viewer is placed into a moment, where the natural world has reorganized itself into a beautiful, terrifying and unfamiliar system of forces. For me, that Suspension of the Known pops the bubble of the ecology of the self and for a moment lets in the briefest glimpse of the inaccessible cosmos. That which lies between what we have seen, and what we know must be there, but can never reach. It is that inner need, the deep emotional desire to want to encounter the Beyond, while being set so solidly in an indifferent cosmos, that sets up conflict in the new work.

My work takes this lifelong conflict of wanting to know the system, while stuck in a body and mind wired for irrational discourse, and lets it play out against my earlier motifs, while building a new set of signs. The cataclysmic tearing open of the picture from my earlier works has been replaced with colossal figures playing out an autobiographical impulse while resisting the constraints of portraiture. Interwoven with non-spatiotemporal geometries and holographic projections, the painting’s signage serves as a fulcrum between the undeniable physicality of existence and our hardwired yearning for the immaterial.”

Jean-Pierre Roy, November 2014

Courtesy : wowxwow.com, gallerypoulson.com

bottom of page