• bruno dunley

    clouds


    january 12 – february 25, 2023

    nara roesler new york

  • Nara Roesler New York is pleased to announce Clouds, a solo exhibition by Brazilian artist Bruno Dunley. A central protagonist of Brazil’s young generation of painters, the artist hereby presents his second solo show in the city, showcasing a body of paintings and works on paper developed over the last two years.

     

    Dunley’s current production continues to explore painting’s constitutive tensions, namely between image and structural thickness, matter and scheme, always determined by an emphatic use of color. Initiated during the pandemic, and thus produced in a more isolated environment, Clouds includes a series of paintings that appear to have internalized the artist’s surroundings at the time, suggesting bewildered and labyrinthine fields, and stressing an oneiric, subjective tone where color manifests in its excess, through undetermined spaces.

  • The obvious, 2022 oil paint on canvas 66.9 x 55.3 x 1.6 in

    The obvious, 2022

    oil paint on canvas

    66.9 x 55.3 x 1.6 in

  • Beginning in 2020, the artist has furthered his experimentation with color, notably fueled by his undertaking of the brand Joules & Joules, which he founded alongside artist Rafael Carneiro. With stalling imports, the now-growing business began during Covid-19 as a result of scarce prime oil paint and offers Brazil’s first high-quality and accessible national product to artists throughout the country. The endeavor launched the artist into a meticulous and highly experimental relationship with pigments, which is reflected in Dunley’s recent production. Motivated by a search for luminosity in the use of oil itself, he proceeds through layers of paint, left to cover or scraped, unfolding a material narrative for his paintings.
  • The night, 2022 oil paint on canvas 88.6 x 110.4 x 1.6 in

    The night, 2022

    oil paint on canvas

    88.6 x 110.4 x 1.6 in

    • The man talking green, 2022 pastel chalk and charcoal on paper 11.7 x 8.3 in
      The man talking green, 2022
      pastel chalk and charcoal on paper
      11.7 x 8.3 in
    • Untitled, 2021 pastel chalk and charcoal on paper 11.7 x 8.3 in
      Untitled, 2021
      pastel chalk and charcoal on paper
      11.7 x 8.3 in
  • Dunley’s works on paper are produced with chalk and charcoal, proposing a more succinct formal and chromatic repertoire. Many of the works on paper included in the exhibition engage with the idea of the cloud, with the artist repeatedly drawing its shape, not as a means of achieving compositional rigor but instead as a way of letting himself be guided by the investigative possibilities of draftmaking as a structural foundation for his paintings.



  • Liébana, 2022 oil paint on canvas 87 x 70.9 x 1.6 in

    Liébana, 2022

    oil paint on canvas

    87 x 70.9 x 1.6 in

  • In Clouds, the shape is explored as an abstract occurrence rather than a figure. Works such as Yellow CloudThe cloud, and The city, capture its form on the brink of the formless, featuring a presence that seems to float within uncertainty. Clouds have always been limit-figures against the backdrop of geometry and perspective, fragments of reality that challenge measurement and graphic control, and, as in Dunley’s recent work, potentially, symbolic forms for abstraction, conveying lightness and ludic oneirism.
  • The cloud, 2022 oil paint on canvas 78.7 x 98.6 x 1.6 in

    The cloud, 2022

    oil paint on canvas

    78.7 x 98.6 x 1.6 in

  • Gasconha, 2022 oil paint on canvas 86.6 x 71.1 x 1.6 in

    Gasconha, 2022

    oil paint on canvas

    86.6 x 71.1 x 1.6 in

  • Yellow cloud, 2022 oil paint on canvas 78.7 x 98.6 x 1.6 in

    Yellow cloud, 2022

    oil paint on canvas

    78.7 x 98.6 x 1.6 in

  • City, 2022 oil paint on canvas 94.5 x 118.3 x 1.4 in

    City, 2022

    oil paint on canvas

    94.5 x 118.3 x 1.4 in

  • bruno dunley


    b. 1984, petropolis, brazil
    lives and works in são paulo, brazil


    The work of Bruno Dunley questions the specificity of painting, particularly in relation to representation and materiality. His paintings depart from carefully constructed compositions, which he gradually begins to correct,alter, and cover up, frequently revealing the lacunae in the apparent continuity of perception. Bruno Dunley is part of a new generation of Brazilian painters called the 200e8 group. The collective, based in São Paulo, was founded with a common interest in painting, to enable its eight members to develop a critical approach to painting within the contemporary art scene. Dunley’s work begins with found images and with an analysis of the nature of painting, where language codes such as gesture, plane, surface, and representation are understood as an alphabet. Recently, his practice has shifted towards gestural abstraction, all while maintaining his interest for representation.

    As stated by the artist ‘I see my work as a series of questions and affirmations about the possibilities of painting, about its essence and our expectations of it.’ Often, a single color predominates the surface of his compositions, establishing a minimalist language and a meditative quality that is frequently addressed in critical texts about his work. More recently, the artist has shown an interest for more aggressive composition, expressed through vibrant and contrasting colors. The 200e8’s practices stipulate that stable or preconceived ideas about artistic processes should be abandoned, and procedures continually reformulated. In the work of Dunley, promises are made and consequently broken, testing the limits of the viewer’s tension.

    selected solo exhibitions

    •  Virá, Nara Roesler, São Paulo, Brazil (2020)

    •  The Mirror, Nara Roesler, New York, USA (2018)

    •  Dilúvio, SIM Galeria, Curitiba, Brazil (2018)

    • Ruído, Nara Roesler, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (2015)

    • e, Centro Universitário Maria Antonia (CeUMA), São Paulo, Brazil (2013)

    • 11bis Project Space, Paris, France (2011)

     

    selected group exhibitions

     Entre tanto, Casa de Cultura do Parque (CCP), São Paulo, Brazil (2020)

    • Triangular: Arte deste século, Casa Niemeyer, Brasilia, Brazil (2019)

    • AI-5 50 ANOS – Ainda não terminou de acabar, Instituto Tomie Ohtake (ITO), São Paulo, Brazil (2018)
     139 X NOTHING BUT GOOD, Park – platform for visual arts, Tilburg, The Netherlands (2018)

    • Visões da arte no acervo do MAC USP 1900–2000, Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade de São Paulo (MAC USP), São Paulo, Brazil (2016)

    • Deserto-modelo, 713 Arte Contemporáneo, Buenos Aires, Argentina (2010)

     

    selected institutional collections

    • Instituto Itaú Cultural, São Paulo, Brazil

    • Museu de Arte Contemporânea da Universidade de São Paulo (MAC USP), São Paulo, Brazil

    • Museu de Arte Moderna de São Paulo (MAM-SP), São Paulo, Brazil

    • Pinacoteca do Estado de São Paulo, São Paulo, Brazil