Jules de Balincourt: Stumbling Pioneers
Perched on the shores of the Pacific Ocean, Los Angeles has, since the pioneering age, been the limitless repository of America’s dreams of the frontier, of desires that saturate the sunsets, freeways, canyons and swimming pools that de Balincourt paints. This landscape, a disjunctured synthesis of the human, the architectural, and the organic, seems to temper idealistic energies: rather than striding boldly into the unknown, the figure drifts aimlessly through sunlit pockets of space, leisurely waiting for some ultimate opportunity for freedom. Here, the promise of the frontier – the hope of progress and the better life it inspires – coexists with a muddled reality of blurred boundaries between man and nature in a landscape that seems comprehensively colonised.
Poised between the strange and the familiar, the works that make up Stumbling Pioneers are rooted in the unmistakeable vibrant landscape of California, yet shaped by dreamlike associations that interconnect large-scale canvases and smaller works. Almost-transparent washes of paint build gradients of colour and form on these carefully constructed surfaces, on which the abstract remains visible amidst defined areas of representation. De Balincourt’s work gestures towards the incalculable process of painting, which he has described as beginning with, ‘a very intuitive dance in the dark of brushes and pigments […] So in a way it is about this intersection in my mind when I abandon the more unknowing primitive approach, finding something that inspires or I need to pursue.’
De Balincourt’s practice occupies a distinct emotional hyperspace, ranging with easy fluency across abstraction and figuration, collective imagination and singularised perception to make idiosyncratic connections within the landscape of contemporary westernised culture. Hard and fast dualities, whether psychological or sociopolitical, are suspended in this shifting space: together, his works invite us to journey across terrain in which it is no longer easy to distinguish between the utopian and the dystopian, the escape and the capture.
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Jules de Balincourt – After the Gold Rush at CAC Málaga
March 12 2021The exhibition (12 March–30 May 2021) features more than forty paintings created over the past decade. Recent paintings by the artist continue an intuitive approach...Read More -
Jules de Balincourt talks to Floorr Magazine about his exhibition at Victoria Miro Mayfair
February 15 2018Could you tell us a bit about yourself and your background. Where did you study? I was born in Paris France in 1972 and between...Read More
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Jules de Balincourt discusses his current exhibition, They Cast Long Shadows, in the Guardian
February 6 2018Denounced monuments, moonlit peace-seekers, how Brexit looks to Americans … Jules de Balincourt’s vivid, dreamlike works capture his country’s divisive times 'In America, the women’s...Read More -
Jules de Balincourt talks to Port Magazine about his exhibition, They Cast Long Shadows, at Victoria Miro Mayfair
January 31 2018Franco-American painter Jules de Balincourt ruminates on abstraction, utopia and the accessibility of art, at the opening of his latest exhibition By Jo Lawson-Tancred If...Read More
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Jules de Balincourt in conversation with Marcel Dzama in the December issue of Juxtapoz Magazine
November 8 2017Jules de Balincourt Searching the Wave of Possibility There’s the depth and scope, the sensational fields of vision in the paintings of Jules de Balincourt....Read More -
Conrad Shawcross and Jules de Balincourt in The Universe and Art at ArtScience Museum Singapore
April 15 2017The Universe and Art is an artistic voyage through the cosmos, exploring where we came from and where we are going. It weaves a rich...Read More
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Jules de Balincourt creates the scenic design for New York City Ballet's production of Scherzo Fantastique
January 22 2017Premieres January 22 as part of New York City Ballet's program Stravinsky x 5 Performances January 22, 24, 27, and February 3 2017 Set to...Read More -
Jules de Balincourt creates two new lithographs for Edition Copenhagen
October 23 2016Just launched, the artist's first lithographs are available via the Edition Copenhagen website . Each work is in an edition of 60, numbered and signed...Read More
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Jules de Balincourt interviewed in Studio International
May 3 2016The painter’s uncanny worlds reflect the post-9/11 zeitgeist with a beguiling charm. The world is a fragile, unsettling place, he says, and it’s difficult not...Read More -
Jules de Balincourt interviewed in The Telegraph
April 16 2016The man who paints the good, the bad and the ugly of modern California. By Jonathan Griffin. In Jules de Balincourt's paintings, the romance of...Read More