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  • sculptures by Bernardí Roig
  • Bernardí Roig (bio)

About the Artist

The studio practice of Bernardí Roig speaks of society at the edges, caught in a time tainted by the loss of historical memory and identity. The artist works in a wide variety of media, but always focuses on the conflicts that arise from the lack of communication between people. In a mass media–addled world, Roig’s individuals lose the ability to distinguish truth from fiction and important issues from trivial concerns. “Today we are living in an atmosphere saturated with images,” the artist says, “but the experience that they produce has a low intensity. Now it is more difficult than ever to give meaning to an image. We are subjected to light, a light that dissolves the outlines of things, a white light within which everything fluctuates.” Roig uses electric light as a metaphor for this mutation: fluorescent tubes encase his subjects, blinding them. The artist explores the dynamics of voyeurism by revisiting classical myths, baroque iconography, and memento mori, filtered through the fundamental issues of postmodern thought. Roig is obsessed with death and immortality, aesthetics and eroticism, and the idée fixe that the thinking man must reclaim his forfeited ability to relate to others on an intimate level. By uniting his own philosophical and literary appropriations, Roig has defined a modern form of realism.

The artist makes use of media as it suits him, and his sculptures, installations, videos, and drawings use the human figure as the conceptual center. However, regardless of the medium chosen, Roig’s creations revolve on the concepts of body confinement and stifled vision. His white sculptures—casts of real people—represent a journey where the memory of the image plays a vital role. Roig speaks to the viewer through his solitary man by forcing us to confront our desires, the human concepts of progress and social change—all of which remain unfulfilled. For Roig, desire is the only thing that keeps death at arm’s length, and it offers tangible proof that we are here, struggling to achieve higher consciousness. [End Page 86]


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bernardí roig
Hanging Practices to Suck the Light, 2012
polyester resin and mixed media
72 × 60 × 20 in.
Claire Oliver Gallery, New York
Photo copyright © Claire Oliver Gallery

[End Page 87]


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bernardí roig
Pierrot le fou is (not) Dead, 2009
polyester resin, wood, fluorescent tube lighting
88 × 360 × 28 in.
Claire Oliver Gallery, New York
Photo copyright © Claire Oliver Gallery

[End Page 88]


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bernardí roig
Pierrot le fou is (not) Dead, 2009 (detail)
polyester resin, wood, fluorescent tube lighting
88 × 360 × 28 in.
Claire Oliver Gallery, New York
Photo copyright © Claire Oliver Gallery

[End Page 89]


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ernardí roig
Not Twin Heads, 2009
polyester resin, fluorescent tube light
14.5 × 43 × 10.5 in.
Claire Oliver Gallery, New York
Photo copyright © Claire Oliver Gallery

[End Page 90]


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bernardí roig
El Paraiso, 2008
mixed media installation
Burgos Cathedral, Burgos, Spain

[End Page 91]


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bernardí roig
El Paraiso, 2008
mixed media installation
Burgos Cathedral, Burgos, Spain

[End Page 92]


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bernardí roig
Blow Up: Laboring Figure, 2010
mixed media installation
Parc Tournay-Solvay, Brussels, Belgium

[End Page 93]


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bernardí roig
Blow Up: Hanging Figure, 2010
mixed media installation
Parc Tournay-Solvay, Brussels, Belgium

[End Page 94]

Bernardí Roig

Bernardí Roig, one of the most prominent names in Spanish contemporary art, makes sculptures, installations, videos, and drawings that use the human figure as their conceptual center, and in doing so creates a dynamism between traditional sculpture and the artist’s own conceptual minimalism. In conjunction with the 53rd Venice Biennale, Ca’ Pesaro, the International Gallery of Modern Art, held a midcareer exhibition for Roig, which juxtaposed a body of fifteen years of the artist’s work with the museum’s permanent collection. His work is included in the collections of the La Caixa Foundation in Barcelona, the Pilar...

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