Mexican artist Bosco Sodi’s signature lava-like material paintings – an otherworldly combination of intense monochrome pigment, sawdust, pulp, natural fibres and glue – have been given an intriguing twist following his two-week artist residency at Axel Vervoordt’s Hong Kong gallery. The uncharacteristically large body of work, part of a solo exhibition opening on 13 February, encapsulates the artist’s familiar use of lush colours and organic earthiness.
But when Sodi started working in the airy, light-filled, industrial loft in Wong Chuk Hang, he found the locally sourced sawdust absorbs pigments completely differently, transforming the results. ‘When I paint in Berlin the sawdust is very dark; in Mexico the one I get is very white,’ he says.
The artist finds the process of making his art meditative. When, as a young boy, he was diagnosed with dyslexia and hyperactivity, his mother took him to an art class. ‘Painting became an escape for me. This is my therapy in a way and I still prefer to work quietly without any disturbance.’ The show has 17 paintings ranging from 26.5 x 17.5cm to 180 x 220cm, but each monochromatic surface is different in its own interesting ways with a distinct materiality, from the small exuberant pieces like molten volcanic lava bubbling on the surface to the larger works’ sheer, raw, visceral landscapes. Some are dramatically slashed as if the material had split.
It is the curious combination of control and spontaneity that excites Sodi the most. ‘I focus much more on the process than on the outcome,’ he says. ‘The shape and scale of the canvas, the painting as an object that transmits meaning — everything else becomes secondary to the experience of colour. What matters is the power of what you see.’ The untitled works are presented alongside five clay sculptures shaped and smoothed by hand into precise cubes and circles before being fired at Sodi’s Casa Wabi studio in Mexico in a traditional brick kiln, giving the clay a terracotta hue. §

Watch a behind-the-scenes look at Sodi’s Hong Kong exhibition. Courtesy of the artist and Axel Vervoordt Gallery

Untitled, 2019, by Bosco Sodi, mixed media on canvas. Photography: Ngai Lung Tai of Random Art Workshop. Courtesy of the artist and Axel Vervoordt Gallery

Untitled, 2019, by Bosco Sodi, mixed media on canvas. Photography: Ngai Lung Tai of Random Art Workshop. Courtesy of the artist and Axel Vervoordt Gallery

Sodi’s works in progress at Axel Vervoordt Hong Kong. Photography: Ngai Lung Tai of Random Art Workshop. Courtesy of the artist and Axel Vervoordt Gallery


 
 
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