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Lan Guagement

Lan Guagement © EP 2021

France, 1992

Oil and acrylic on canvas, 200 x 200 cm

signed (on the reverse)

Purchased from the artist in 1992


Jean-Philippe Aubanel probes humanity by depicting the various real and fake masks that mark our common history. A traveller by nature and choice, the artist spend part of his childhood in Portugal, studied at the Fine Arts Schools of Aix-en-Provence, Paris and Lyon before discovering, in the 1970s, life in Tunisia, New York and The Netherlands. Having artistically emerged in the 1980s where substantial emphasis was put on materiality, Aubanel’s art strikes one by its textured quality. Colours, surfaces, varnishes are scratched, carved into or etched, revealing the often forgotten materiality of the elements that compose a painting. The human figure quickly imposed itself as Aubanel’s core theme, a subject matter he mainly approaches through the motif of the mask. Enriched by his numerous travels and curiosity for non-occidental cultures, the artist has been able to use the motif in a very personal way. Ironic in the 1980s, the mask becomes sombre, grave and at times morbid (skull-inspired and thus leaning towards the memento mori tradition) in more recent works. Lan Guagement (a play on spelling meaning the engagement) is illustrative of Aubanel’s interest in faces. Indeed, the figure possesses a mask-like face, an animalistic profile can be identified on the right-hand side and even the astronomical body seems to be sporting a humanoid expression.
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Lan Guagement

Jean-Philippe AUBANEL

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  • 1982

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  • 1983

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    Altiero Spinelli present the draft treaty on European Union.

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    Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union (2000/C 364/01)


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