MARLÈNE MOCQUET

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Blue Spot on Human Hands
Blue Spot on Human Hands

MARLÈNE MOCQUET



Combining surrealism with the sublime, Marlène Mocquet drips her canvases in oils, acrylics and gouache, creating an effect that equals parts ethereal, warped and fantastic. Each disparate picture registers as a character within a greater aesthetic alphabet that Mocquet employs to describe an absurd microcosm of players and scenes.

Mocquet’s is a world of animated objects and anthropomorphic animals. Birds, volcanoes and beasts bleed into her raw surfaces. She simultaneously obeys and defies her materials - sometimes creating the illusion of a watercolor, other times letting the viscosity of paint live on its own. Bold and arbitrary gestures operate as starting points to generate imagery and dictate composition – these surrealist devices are utilized to develop her dizzying brand of anti-narrative.

Mocquet’s lucid formal vernacular is reminiscent of early Paul Klee, or at times Max Ernst, in her affinity for symbols and otherworldly stand-ins. The aesthetic qualities of Klee’s almost primitive early drawings and paintings appear in delicate ways throughout Mocquet’s arrangements. Her work also lays claim to such varied sources as Art Brut, the Cobra Movement, the grotesquerie of James Ensor, the exquisite palate of Emil Nolde, and the transcendent botanicals of Odilon Redon. The artist’s coarse mark-making and the faux-naïf of subject matter presents an almost brutal and seemingly outsider quality.

Marlène Mocquet is a graduate of L’Ecole Normale Superieure des Beaux-Arts, Paris and has exhibited in both the United States as well as in numerous exhibitions across Europe. She lives and works in Paris, France.