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패트릭 H. 존스 展 Patrick H. Jones
Crowded Emotions
Duarte Sequeira Seoul
2026. 1. 23(금) ▶ 2026. 2. 14(토) 서울 용산구 한남대로20길 61-17 1층, 3층 | T.02-6953-0553
On the Invisible Faces
In the new works Jones presents at Duarte Sequeira Seoul, a marked shift from his recent practice is immediately evident. Abstraction gives way to greater specificity; human figures replace animals; dense crowds press tightly into the pictorial field.
Most striking is the recurring figure of the “man in ties,” repeated across canvasesㅡ figures that read less as individuals than as units functioning within a system. They obey visible rules. The joker, by contrast, appears to mock those rules, yet is simultaneously more deeply ensnared by them than anyone else. The suited gentleman and the painted clown are, Jones suggests, not opposites but reflectionsㅡtwo faces of the same capture. Jostling without clear purpose, afraid of missing something, they surge and collide, shouting their claims into the mass. Still, no definitive line is drawn between who is rightㅡor wrong. As the exhibition unfolds, the crowd in Jones’s gaze reveals itself as a compression chamber of excessive emotionsㅡanxiety, desire, emptiness, competitivenessㅡcondensed into a single surface. And yet, within this suffocating density, Jones refuses to relinquish hope for the human individual. In Self Reflection, for the first time, a figure appears who meets another’s gaze while simultaneously confronting their own imageㅡthe sole subject who truly looks at themselves.
Standing amid flowers in full, uncontained bloom, unpartitioned by walls or doors, this figure holds its gaze steady. It is a gesture that resists surrender to collective affect, calling instead for a return to individual measure and responsibility.
In recent years, Jones has experienced profound emotional extremesㅡthe death of his father, the birth of a childㅡand these have quietly reshaped the thematic core of his work. As loss and birth pressed outward from within, more concrete faces surfaced on the canvas. Yet the clearer these faces became, the more invisible they seemed. Within a crowd where collectivity and anonymity merge to produce near-identical visages, one must ask: with what face do we exist, and as what? At the very moment we believe ourselves unseen, are we still capable of existing distinctlyㅡnot as “we,” but as “I”? As Jones himself has noted, this body of work speaks both to the emotions held by individuals and to the notion that crowds, too, possess emotions of their own. We are beings required to function as part of a collective while remaining, insistently, individual within it. Have we forgotten that living among others demands a constant deferral of total sameness? Jones’s latest works refuse to release that discomforting question, holding it open until the very end.
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* 전시메일에 등록된 모든 이미지와 글은 작가와 필자에게 저작권이 있습니다. * vol.20260123-패트릭 H. 존스 Patrick H. Jones 展 |