Duncan’s
Amir Chasson
Amir Chasson, Duncan’s, 2011
Oil, pencil and household paint on canvas
101 x 81 x 2 cm
Green GT
Amir Chasson
Amir Chasson, Green GT, 2010
Oil, pencil and household paint on canvas
101 x 81 x 2cm
Green GT
Amir Chasson
Amir Chasson, Green GT, 2010
Oil, pencil and household paint on canvas
101 x 81 x 2cm
Stripped of numerical data or titles and rendered in household paint, they become mute abstractions hovering in space. Painting levels the playing field, enabling lines of communication and sympathy to be drawn between the two: they become (as in a work like
Mat is Helping Us) a kind of double portrait. Released from language – this person’s job, this graph’s meaning – Chasson’s works are celebrations of not knowing, small assertions of mystery and doubt.
No-Other
Amir Chasson
Amir Chasson, No-Other, 2011
Oil, pencil and household paint on canvas
100 x 121 x 2 cm
Amir Chasson’s paintings seem to juxtapose two different ways of understanding the world: the statistic, represented in graph form, and the individual, a close-up portrait. At first look, this combination – man against number – might stand for a straightforward social critique, or a restaging of an age-old conflict in painting itself (the figurative against the abstract). Yet it’s the act of painterly transcription, and particularly Chasson’s soft, almost tender blurring of the transitions in a human face, that complicates such an easy reading.
The eyes of his painted faces meet ours warily, or look away in response to scrutiny, recalling photographs taken quickly, perfunctorily – the workplace headshot, maybe, or police mugshot. Painting’s slowness transforms the image into something to be looked at, not merely a functional identifier for a laminated pass, and it does that for the graphs, too.
Mat
Amir Chasson
Amir Chasson, Mat, 2011
Oil, pencil and household paint on canvas
101 x 81 x 2 cm
Text by Ben Street