Description
Artist statement
This work delves deeply into themes of loss and nostalgia through colour, text, and symbolism. It reimagines the iconic gay pride flag in stark black and white, stripping away the vibrant hues for which the flag is known. Instead, the colours are rendered through text. This intentional removal of colour poignantly symbolizes the nuances of gay rights, reflecting an environment where loss of rights and historical regression continues to be a reality. The stripping away of colour imbues the work with a sense of melancholy and introduces ambiguity.
Our editions section often looks at artists who do not work primarly in print making and offers a workshop with an expert printer, to help bring their medium to an print edition. This is the artists first editioned print and first time working in woodcut, thank you to Georgina Berens of Loft Editions who helped facilitate a workshop and produced the final print.
In a gesture of advocacy, Seiler has committed to donating 25% of the proceeds from the sale of this print to the Pride Shelter, a non-profit dedicated to supporting the LGBTQ+ community.
Biography
BRETT CHARLES SEILER
(b. 1994 Zimbabwe)
Through his paintings, Brett Charles Seiler creates an interior world which wavers between desire and anxiety. He explores the male body, domestic space, poetry, Queer history, Biblical symbolism, love and alienation, as well as the possibilities of painting as a medium. His experimentation with material, colour, and line has culminated in a unique and carefully honed style. In his search for materials which are both evocative and easily accessible, Seiler’s early paintings included found objects such as old black-and-white photographs and fabric. Though these objects have mostly been stripped away from his most recent paintings, they have been absorbed as visual strategy. The photographs are present in the snapshot-like, narrative atmosphere of the depicted scenes, and in the colour palette and tones. The interest in fabric can be seen in his treatment of the canvas as an important part of the finished work. The rawness of the surface and the sketched quality of the lines add to the feeling that we are witnessing a brief, urgent moment in time which has passed but been memorialised.
Even in the more conventional of Seiler’s painted scenes, the void-like backgrounds add an enticing ambiguity to the works. They become otherworldly. In some cases, they offer a vision of an untouched heaven, but more often they have the texture of a dream (or nightmare). You can see familiar objects – a houseplant, a thrifted mid-mod chair, a parquet floor – and yet the surroundings remain alien and unstable. Perspective is unsturdy, with flatness and depth being represented alongside each other. The most fascinating visual element is the male subjects.
The lines of the figures feel fragile, as if they could be washed away into their surroundings at any moment. Their poses, and the way that they hold and touch each other, tell stories which are never fully revealed. In looking at Seiler’s bodies, I am reminded of Cezanne’s group and solo studies of nude, awkwardly-posed but still sensual men. However, the symbolic, narrative quality of Seiler’s paintings differs from Cezanne’s limited variations of bathers in front of bodies of water.
Seiler’s recent series of paintings are rich with visual references. The domestic space is destabilised by what appears to be an apocalyptic event. In one, a man kneels before another, like a sinner asking for Christ’s salvation, but also like a man seeking solace from his lover. There are also art historical references, such as a painting within a painting and reclining nudes. Words and poetry are another important aspect of Seiler’s practice. His works have included comic but tragic anecdotes, love letters, and references to Queer culture. He references the legendary Fire Island. The ‘Coke/cock bottle’ which appears often within the paintings and as a sculptural object allows for a moment of erotic humour.
All of these visual elements offer a sensitive navigation of his own experiences as a gay man who has lived through shame and alienation, as well as love – and the joy and anxiety that comes with it. As seen in works such as the Gay Alphabet series, Seiler is not afraid to engage directly with the political, but he makes the politics of gender and sexuality feel intimate and immediate. Beyond this personal/political lens, the works are an expression of his passion for artistic practice itself – through both the physical act of painting, and the history of art and Culture.
– Khanya Mashabela
Seiler, a graduate of the Ruth Prowse School of Art in 2015, has gained international recognition through a series of impactful solo and group exhibitions. His solo exhibitions include “Luke, Warm” at Everard Read in London, “Oh, Christopher” at M+B in Los Angeles, and a prominent show at Galerie Eigen. Additionally, his work was featured at the Cologne Art Fair and the Investec Cape Town Art Fair, further establishing his presence in the global art scene. Seiler is currently working between Cape Town and Germany.