Aléas

Delimbo
C/Pérez Galdós nº 1 Acc., Seville, Spain
October 8th 2015 – January 12 2016

Eltono-aleas-6

6 Lienzos (6 canvases):

Interested in using the street as a workshop, I created a printing system that takes advantage of the passage of cars to generate works on canvas.

U.V.:

In this experiment, I take advantage of sunlight to produce prints. The procedure involves placing a cardboard template on a painted fluorescent color paper and leaving it in the sun for a certain period of time.

7 lines passing through 4 points:

Random painting exercise – I painted 7 lines each one built by linking 4 points together. The coordinates of the points and the order of the colors are chosen at random.

Punto de encuentro (meeting point):

Wooden planks found in the streets of Seville during the trips I made between my hotel and the gallery. Each table is modified making a cut that reproduces the route that I took, the table under my arm, between the place where I found the wood and the gallery.

Collages:

Each collage is comprised of the combination of 3 different templates, 3 colors and background paper (yellow). I tried different combinations by changing the order of the designs and colors making unique collages where no two combinations are alike.

Verso:

This exercise is a non-exhaustive comparison of how different pens react to different papers. Depending on the weight of the paper, the drawing appears more or less defined on the back of the sheet. I drew 91 versions of a modular drawing and displayed them showing the back side of each paper.

Exhibitions view:

Text (in Spanish) by Guillermo López Gallego:

Eltono: lo que hay debajo de la playa

Paso largos periodos fuera de Madrid. La última vez que volví, sentí una penetrante melancolía ante las piezas plateadas de la M-30, las puertas cubiertas de tags, las letras redondeadas. Sentí como dolor lo que ya sabía: el graffiti es una conversación en cada ciudad, y yo me estaba perdiendo la de la mía.
Como una marca con ínfulas, he visto piezas en Abijan, Berlín, Bogotá, Bruselas, Buenos Aires, Zaragoza, Conakry, Freetown, Hamburgo, Monrovia, Nueva York, París, Panamá, Portland, Santander, San Petersburgo, Seattle, Sevilla, Tallin, Riga, Vilna… Pero no he seguido esas conversaciones.
Y eso es lo primero que me viene a la cabeza al pensar en la obra de Eltono.

*

Parece que hay dos maneras de escribir sobre Eltono y su obra.
Hay quien opta por el enfoque histórico. Este se puede encontrar en otros sitios, y de la mano del propio Eltono en la publicación Line & Surface. Es sabido: Otone, GAP (crew a la que Eltono todavía mencionó en 2009), los trenes parisinos; cómo llegó a Madrid en 1999 y cómo reaccionó a la saturación del centro, es decir, la aparición de Eltono, la adopción de un icono que ha ido refinándose, adoptando una estética minimalista, limpia, sencilla, y una técnica depurada y sin aerosol.
Luego están los relatos sobre la experiencia de conocer la obra de Eltono en las calles de Madrid. Entiendo el aire de epifanía que tienen aquellos, porque recuerdo pasar el verano de 2001 buscando a Eltono en las puertas y rejas de Lavapiés. Me acuerdo de una pieza en los cuarteles de Daoíz y Velarde en 2006, la primera que vi con tres colores; otra envejecida al final de Cuatro Caminos, en 2009. Hace dos años, descubrí una obra antigua en la calle Infantas, cerca de Colmenares, que reaparece periódicamente bajo los carteles que anuncian conciertos y fiestas.
He podido apreciar, como muchos otros, la importancia que el contexto tiene en la obra de Eltono, su forma de señalar texturas en la ciudad y de ennoblecer y recuperar espacios. Y no creo que se pueda acusar a Eltono de contribuir a la gentrificación de los lugares donde trabaja; conociendo su respetuosa reivindicación de la artesanía y la forma en que trabaja con las comunidades, seguro que ha pensado en ello.
He observado también, siguiendo su trabajo en museos y galerías, la inteligencia con la que ha sabido llevar a esos contextos la esencia del trabajo de calle. Cualquiera que haya visto las obras de taller de Blade sabe que la transición de la calle al circuito comercial no es fácil.
Eltono (y aquí empieza mi intento de ir más allá de las dos maneras de escribir que acabo de mencionar) ha sabido inducir los principios generales del trabajo de calle, y trasladarlos al taller. Ha sabido encontrar, creo, dos claves del graffiti que le permiten crear arte urbano fuera de la calle. Quizá porque Eltono es francés, siempre las imagino en términos franceses.
En primer lugar, ha extraído y refinado la idea de contrainte, de restricción, propia del Oulipo. La obra de taller de Blade, como la de Seen y Lee y otras leyendas del graffiti, tiene algo kitsch, porque se limita a usar los aerosoles sobre el lienzo en vez del vagón, y no sabe incorporar la forma en que la calle determina el graffiti, el peso de tener el tiempo contado, la interacción con el público y la intemperie: su pintura no es obra sino reproducción.
Eltono, en cambio, ha identificado algunos elementos del graffiti que le permiten crear en el taller obras de calle: la aleatoriedad y la intervención acelerada del paso del tiempo, por ejemplo. Y lo hace, como él mismo dice, de manera casi científica: «imagino un protocolo, decido unas reglas, las ejecuto y observo los resultados». Es decir, a la manera de Pérec y Queneau.
En segundo lugar, Eltono ha ahondado la raíz situacionista del graffiti. No hablo de las banales pintadas inspiradas en la obra de Debord y Vaneigem, desde mayo del 68 hasta hoy. Me refiero al enfoque situacionista, de nuevo casi científico, del paseo, y el uso que de él hace Eltono, por ejemplo, en obras desarrolladas en Vitoria y Pekín.
(Y al détournement, también situacionista: la subversión de la publicidad de cerrajeros y pintores de brocha gorda, que también habla de su conocimiento de la ciudad.)
Es posible que haya contradicción en someter la artesanía del paseo situacionista al rigor de la contrainte del Oulipo. Pero Eltono parece resolver ese problema por la vía de la inmanencia, como podría decir François Julien: contrainte y deriva no se aniquilan, sino que crean.

*

Oulipo y situacionismo. Recuerdo también que Javier Abarca, cuyos estudios de la obra de Eltono son brillantes, habla de Daniel Buren y Space Invader en algunos de ellos. Quizá Eltono es más francés de lo que nos gusta pensar. Pero es parte de nuestra conversación.

Guillermo López Gallego

Incontrôlables

Instituto Cervantes de Paris
7, Rue Quentin Bauchart, 75008 Paris
June 12th – September 4th 2015

eltono-incontrolables-icp

Incontrôlables is a series of experimental actions in which the artist loses, on purpose, the control of the creative process allowing outside secondary factors to work. The end result is unpredictable and the artist finds himself in the observer’s position surprised by his own creations.

Exhibition curated by Slowtrack (Madrid) and Juan Manuel Bonet.

paris.cervantes.es
slowtracksociety.com

Moulures:

Fascinated by the places on the facades of buildings where different volumes and levels come together, the artist collected the silhouettes of moldings around the city and brought the negative of the silhouette into the gallery on a wooden placard.

Rules: the molding has to meet a flat surface. The negative form obtained should not be studied in advance.

U.V.:

Works of art should be protected from sunlight. Here, in contrast, the artist takes the aggressiveness of the sun’s light to produce prints.

Rules: a template on a painted fluorescent orange paper is placed and exposed to the sun. Every day a new piece of paper is put out in order to observe the progression of the experiment. 7 papers were exposed for a week in Albuquerque and 15 for two weeks in Belvès (France).

G.A.S. (Street prints):

Revolving around the idea of using the street as a workshop, the artist conceived a printing system that takes advantage of passing cars to generate prints.

Rules: the result is shown exactly as it was found when removed from the street, even in case of failure. The date, time and location of the print are written on each print.

RUFO (Rudimentary Unidentified Frictional Object):

To study how the city can literally alter a work of art, the artist “walks” a painting around on a leash. The painting is face down with the artwork touching and scraping against the street.

Rules: paint a table and “walk it”, with the painted side face down on the city streets. The route is determined in advance. The artist can not look under the board before the end of the walk. The course completed for each painting must form a loop.

8/4 and 5/4:

An exercise in random painting where the artist paints up to 8 lines each composed of 4 points. The coordinates of the points and the color or each line are chosen at random.

Rules: the coordinates of each point are randomly generated. The points are marked on paper and numbered from 1 to 4. Then, they are joined together in numerical order. Up to 8 colors can be used in random order of appearance.

Graviers:

An experiment regarding the movements of the city. Having painted a rectangle on the floor, the artist observed its gradual degradation until it completely disappeared.

Rules: Painting done on a horizontal surface made of gravel. Paint a red box with a template and take a picture of the result. Return at least once a day to photograph the changes until the rectangle has totally disappeared

Thanks to Slowtrack, Marta Moriarty, Inés Muñozcano, Juan Manuel Bonet, Rafael Schacter, Raquel Caleya and everybody at the Instituto Cervantes de París.

Pictures by Sierra Forest, Rafael Schacter and Eltono.

Oxymores

Ministry of Culture
182, rue Saint Honoré, Paris, France
April 3rd – May 3rd 2015

Périmètre au Sol is the exact measurement of the line separating the public space from the private space around the Ministry of Culture building on Saint Honoré Street in Paris. I drew the generated line on four big papers (3,70 m x 1,40 m), each one representing one façade. The color code I used is two warm colors for the South and West façades and two cold colors for North and East.

www.oxymores2015.fr

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eltono-oxymores-ministere-culture-paris

Eltono-perimetreausol-MCC

Mapping The City‬

Somerset House
London, U.K.
Exhibition curated by A by P
22 January – 15 February 2015

www.a-by-p.com
www.somersethouse.org.uk/visual-arts/mapping-the-city

10 Promenades
Acrylic on wood 122 x 100 cm

For Mapping the City, I presented a sculpture made out of the 10 unplanned walks I did in Beijing in late 2013 and early 2014. I wanted to present the routes in a way as random as the walks happened so I decided to hang them from their center of gravity instead of their cardinal orientation.
More info about the Promenades project here: www.eltono.com/projects/promenades

For inquiries about this artwork, please contact A by P here: www.a-by-p.com/more-info/#contact

Artmossphere Biennale

Moscow, Russia
September 2014

RUFO – Rudimentary Unidentified Frictional Object

I have been doing research around the idea of “creating while walking” for a long time now (see the Promenades Project I did in Beijing: www.eltono.com/en/projects/promenades), my last idea was to register friction during a walk and I came up with the idea of RUFO – RUFO is a typical dog name in French and also the name of a toy dog that was released in the 80´s. I decided the four letters would stand for “Rudimentary Unidentified Frictional Object”.

Basically, I wanted to drag an artwork along a defined path and register the way it decays. I was doing tests around this idea when I was asked to participate in Artmossphere Biennial in Moscow so I decided to do the first RUFO experiment in the street of the Russian capital. I painted 11 wood boards with bold colored graphics and one by one dragged them around the city on different paths I had selected earlier (around the exhibition space, in random neighborhood, around the Red Square, around the hotel…). Each walk was between one and two kilometers, except for RUFO #9 where I walked for 2,5 kilometers and the painting almost disappeared entirely. Having the artwork interacting with the outside was crucial – showing artworks in the state they came out of the studio doesn’t interest me – my idea was to “print” the city onto each board turning them into witnesses of a walk, an experience. On the back of each board I showed the map of the walk and all the data generated (date, time, duration, distance and name of the streets wandered) – note that during the biennial, I showed reproductions of the back of the boards on spare boards for the people to understand better the story.

Pictures by Natalia Solovieva – Thanks to everybody at Artmosspere and to the people from Codered.

Varianti

Ritmo
Via Grotte Bianche 62, Catania, Italy
June 9th – August 31st 2014

MOMO & Eltono

Inspired by the nearby market and particularly its cleaning activity, we designed 6 shapes and made up a device to generate random compositions with them. By shaking the device, we generated and documented hundreds of compositions; 52 were chosen, reproduced as collages and framed.

Video showed during the exhibition:

eltono-momo-varianti10
(Click on the picture to enlarge)

These artworks are for sale through the Ritmo gallery.

Amalgama

Slowtrack
C/ Cañizares 12, Madrid, Spain
March 27 – May 26 2014

First room:
Boîte à Compositions: www.eltono.com/exhibitions/solo/amalgama/boite-a-compositions
Modulo L: www.eltono.com/exhibitions/solo/amalgama/modulo-l
Nebulosas: www.eltono.com/exhibitions/solo/amalgama/nebulosas
Road Prints: www.eltono.com/exhibitions/solo/amalgama/road-prints
Patio:
Armatoste: www.eltono.com/exhibitions/solo/amalgama/armatoste
Second room:
I presented the outcome of 7 walks I did in Beijing for the Promenades project: www.eltono.com/projects/promenades

If you are interested in purchasing any of these pieces, please contact the gallery: www.slowtracksociety.com

Pictures by Eltono and ©Miguel Rosón (www.v15.es)
Thanks LUCE, Esther, Dani and Greta, Nov9 and everybody at Slowtrack.

Wooster Collective 10th Anniversary

Jonathan Levine Gallery
525 W 22nd Street, New York, USA
7 August  – 24 august 2013
Curated by Marc and Sara Schiller

One Minute Before

Since I started painting geometric shapes using masking tape I have always found the moment right before pulling the tape off very interesting. At first, it looks a bit uncontrolled and messy but with a closer look, you can already begin to see an organized structure among the chaos of the tape and paint. Because painting in the street (for obvious reasons) has to be a quick action, this moment where the paint and the tape exist simultaneously is always extremely short. The idea for this new series called “One Minute Before” is to generate a collection of drawings based on the re-creation of this brief moment just before the tape is pulled off and the painting is revealed – a moment that, apart from myself, very few people have ever seen. All the drawings are based on real paintings that exist or have existed in the street, most of them painted illegally.

The first three drawings of this series were created in Beijing in June 2013 using pencil, acrylic and watercolor on paper.

This new series of work was presented to the public for the first time during the Wooster Collective 10th Anniversary Show at the Jonathan Levine Gallery in New York in August of 2013.

To ask about availability and prices of these artworks, please write an email to: artworks@eltono.com