Time Out reviews Secundino Hernández: Paso

★★★★ 

By Eddy Frankel

 

Build and destroy, that’s what Spanish painter Secundino Hernández does. He builds layers of paint on big canvases, then strips them away, constructs visual compositions and tears them down. That’s the ‘step’ of the title, ‘Paso’: steps of painting, meaning and process. Sounds bloody exhausting.

 

The opening room here is full of colour. Canvases with thick, bulging, 3D blobs of paint sat on flat planes. Black swoops, big globby mountains, expanses of orange and green, all split up, minimal, distanced.

 

Upstairs, the colour disappears. Plain black and white canvases, painted then erased with a pressure washer. They’re like Lucio Fontana paintings left in the sun, or peeling public billboards.

 

In amongst all this is a giant palette-esque painting of clashing colour, heaving mounds of thick goo, every hue imaginable, splurged together. It makes you feel lost, dwarfed by pure pigment, adrift in an ocean of reds and purples and yellows. Suffocating, but…in a good way.

 

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Image: installation view, Secundino Hernández, Paso. Photography: Thierry Bal

 

April 7 2017