
Thameur Mejri Tunisian, b. 1982
He seeks to reinterpret the language of paint, by means of mutiny and dissent, as to translate the immediacy of his tragic vision of the world. The brushwork is all the more important as his color palette denotes more than a mere reminiscence of atmosphere; the aggregation of hues and elements signals an eruption, a solfatara, a muffled noise, a cacophony, a cue for imminent catastrophe and hostility, potentially echoing an ecological stance, as Mejri ponders whether or not we are in harmony with our environments. Often defying gravity, the highly visible contours of his figures’ disassembled limbs, legs and hands, enhance Mejri’s lucid facture where the act of crucifixion is reinterpreted–– hence sparking a dialogue with Grünewald for instance. The postures and scales are imperatively of direct significance for they serve as a coda to his open ended questioning on the alienation, fall and demise of Man. The violent motion overlaid on the canvas evidently bespeaks our current positions in the world, how we are in a state of constant menace, alerted, and in crisis.
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