Louisa Gagliardi at Rodolphe Janssen

Artist: Louisa Gagliardi

Exhibition title: Around the Clock

Venue: Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Belgium

Date: September 8 – October 22, 2022

Photography: HV photography / all images copyright and courtesy of the artist and Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels

The method of loci is a mnemonic device used for perfecting the act of cognitive recall, designed to enhance memory’s function through the construction of a mental form of architecture [1]. The “memory palace”, as it has often been referred to, is an immaterial construction visualized as a familiar space, or place. The intent is that through memorizing a particular site, one can train the mind to enact specific recollection based on the location of information within this mental architecture. Visualizing oneself searching for knowledge in this way is considered a method of enhanced recall, one aided by this palace of the mind. A mind palace is often familiar to its maker. It could be an ornate folly or as simple as a stone structure, like a house. When navigating the enclaves of the mind, memory operates as the mortar for the bricks from which this architecture is constructed.

In the house Louisa Gagliardi builds, memory is neither flawed nor fixed, it is a viscous material imbued into the structural environs of the subconscious. Here the mind oozes through recollections of lived and cinematic experiences. Events are obfuscated between fact and fiction while smeared across smooth and glossy surfaces. Iridescent and translucent, meaning slips along shapes, places, and people, pooling at the fissures between shrouds of synthetic layers. In this world, the mind is a composite, it is both body and architecture—twilight figures blend intermittently between depth and flatness, all the while existing within a liminal state of chiaroscuro shadow.

Around the Clock, the artist’s third solo presentation at the gallery, melts formals referents together into the iconic alloy of the artist’s images. Tethered to the familiar like an ominous déjà vu, Gagliardi transports us into a world seemingly ambivalent of our presence. As viewers, we are caught between the thresholds of seeing and being seen, unclear if we are invited into this act of total recall. Yet as viewers our voyeurism is implicated through the triangulation of the gaze— onto subjects, towards each other, and finally onto ourselves, as the artist employs us as equal actors into her foreboding tableaus.

Cinema, like painting, is psychological art. Action slides between stasis and movement; in the passive gesture of watching, time slows down into frozen moments between gazes. These works enact a melodrama in slow-motion, stretched outside of a celluloid chronology. Through a process manipulating printed PVC plastic, Gagliardi translates her pictures from digital to physical. This action allows her images to float between rendering and painting, copy and original. In doing so the artist folds together nostalgia and memory into shimmering constructions built from mercury in a perpetual state of retrograde. By assembling these images as a series of psychological rooms, a palace of the subconscious is built. As either resort destination or formal purgatory, this place is seemingly isolated from the turning movement of the world. Even so, in the fantastical realms of the subconscious reality tends to slip through its sheen, uncannily familiar. All the while we are placed outside, looking in through windows.

-Alex Turgeon

1 Nolen, Jeannette L.. “mnemonic”. Encyclopedia Britannica, 18 Sep. 2019, https://www.britannica.com/topic/mnemonic. Accessed 5 August 2022.

Louisa Gagliardi (Born in 1989 in Switzerland; lives and works in Zurich, Switzerland) Her work has recently been shown at Centre d’Art Contemporain Genève, Geneva, Switzerland (2021); Antenna Space, Shanghai, China (2020); McNamara Art Projects, Hong Kong (2019); Aargauer Kunsthaus, Aarau (2018); Centre d’art de Neuchâtel CAN, Neuchâtel (2018); Kunst Halle Sankt Gallen, St. Gallen (2018); MOSTYN, Llandudno, Wales, UK (2018); Openforum, Berlin (2018); Plymouth Rock, Zurich (2018); the Louisiana, Humlebæk (2017); Pilar Corrias, London (2017); rodolphe janssen, Brussels (2017); The Cabin, LA (2016); Tomorrow Gallery, New York (2016); Instituto Svizzero, Rome, Italy (2016) and König Galerie, Berlin (2016). She was shortlisted for the Swiss Art Awards in 2018 and 2021. Gagliardi’s work was recently acquired by the Frac, Normandie, France and she just presented a new project for Unlimited at Art Basel this year.

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Around the Clock, 2022, exhibition view, Rodolphe Janssen, Brussels, Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Reach Around, 2022, Gel medium, ink on PVC, 200 x 165 cm, 78 3/4 x 65 in. Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Boiling Point, 2022, Nail polish, ink on PVC, 170 x 155 cm, 66 7/8 x 61 1/8 in. Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Plus One, 2022, Gel medium, nail polish, ink on PVC, 200 x 170 cm, 78 3/4 x 66 7/8 in. Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Cabin Fever, 2022, Ink on PVC, 180 x 250 cm, 70 7/8 x 98 3/8 in. Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Dirty Move, 2022, Nail polish, ink on PVC, 30 x 40 cm, 11 3/4 x 15 3/4 in. Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Bon Après-midi, 2022, Ink on PVC, 170 x 235 cm, 66 7/8 x 92 1/2 in. Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography

Louisa Gagliardi, Flicker, 2022, Nail polish, ink on PVC 165 x 115 cm, 65 x 45 1/4 in. Courtesy of the artist and rodolphe janssen, Brussels. Photo: HV photography