Loop

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In this exhibition, Gili draws on designs and geometric motifs made by the artist across the last two decades of his practice in order to investigate the repeated elements which appear throughout his artistic development, now realised in bold colour.

The exhibition and title also reference the ‘looping narratives’ behind the artist and his country’s shared histories. Gili’s father, whose diaries from the 1960s were central to the development of the exhibition, fled Francoist Spain to settle in Venezuela in 1968. In 1996, Jaime Gili returned across the Atlantic to settle in London. Today, approximately 6 million other Venezuelans have emigrated from the nation which once offered so much hope to immigrants.

Among the many influences for Gili in this exhibition, the 1968 public project Imagen de Caracas is of considerable importance. Funded by the local authorities to celebrate the 400th anniversary of Caracas as a city, the event coincided with Gili’s father’s arrival in Venezuela. Although the project was cut short by displeased authorities, the efforts by the team of artists — led by painter Jacobo Borges — to document the history of Caracas across film, script, music and performance in a purpose-built pavilion, represents an important moment in the history of Venezuela’s artistic past.

In response to this critical moment in Venezuelan art history, Gili has created an installation of four canvases, which will hang suspended in an irregular cubed shape, leaving the walls of the gallery blank. The hanging of the four canvases, as well as the coloured carpet, reference the display aesthetics of 20th century world fairs, especially some Venezuelan pavilions of the Sixties.

An opening reception with the artist will take place on Thursday, 17 February, 2022 from 5-8pm at Cecilia Brunson Projects.

On Friday, 25 February, Jaime Gili will also host an audio-visual presentation entitled Loop Pavilion. This limited capacity experiential event will be presented in two time slots, at 6pm and at 7.30pm, and for which RSVP will be required.

Loop Pavilion will present both archival and new content edited by Jaime Gili, in collaboration with three generations of Venezuelan artists, including Jacobo Borges. In this presentation, Gili will mirror the variety of mediums present at Imagen de Caracas — music, speech and video — to explore the move away from the at-the-time popular styles of Kinetic art and geometric abstraction. This move contrasts with Gili’s conscious return to that tradition - a ‘return’ which here is tempered by an awareness of the different contexts which both Imagen de Caracas and abstract art now inhabit, fifty years later and on the other side of the Atlantic. In doing so, Loop becomes an important event in the afterlife of this key moment in art history.