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Johan Van Mullem's 'emotional portraits'

— April 2013

Associated media

Johan Van Mullem, Sans Titre, ink on board ©the artist

Rosalind Ormiston talks to painter Johan Van Mullem

For nearly 50 years, Belgian figurative artist Johan van Mullem (b.1959), has been drawing and painting faces. It is a subject that absorbs his attention and one that created continuity for him during a nomadic childhood as the young son of a diplomat father living in different countries. He was born in Isiro, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, to Flemish parents. Today, after a successful career as an architect, Van Mullem has taken his love of portraiture to a professional level. His first major London show in November 2012 – a collaboration between Hus Gallery and Andipa Gallery – explored his lifelong love and practice in ‘Movements of the Soul’, an exhibition of 33 works. We met at the Andipa Gallery on the first day of the exhibition.

Rosalind Ormiston: During the last two years you have given up your architectural practice to concentrate on painting. What motivated this change?

Johan van Mullem: I always wanted to be a painter. It took me 53 years to do it!

RO: Can you recall your first inspiration for drawing and painting portraits?

JvM: I made my first portrait painting when I was seven and didn’t understand why my parents brought it to the framer! I first started drawing at the age of five. I drew the faces of people around me; they were older than me, which got me started on an interest in older faces. Later, at the age of 12, I started drawing in ink, again focusing on portraits of older people. I was interested in the features that characterize an older face. The older I have become the younger the portraits are; I turned to painting much later.

RO: What is your method of painting?

JvM: Before I begin to make something I have to have everything clear around me. Then I ‘feel’ the size I want to work on and choose the music or silence. For me painting is an unconscious act; it is not of the brain; I am on a different level of expression. I invent the faces and the characters I portray. They are emotional portraits, not a literal depiction of a person.I paint instinctively.

RO: Your style of painting, with its rich palette and expressive brushstroke, has been compared to Rembrandt’s late works. Is this an intentional appropriation?

JvM: Rembrandt has always been present without being able to explain why. As if it was someone I knew so well without being able to talk about him. He is more than an inspiration. He is a presence. A kind of understanding, sharing. It is a feeling I can discover sometimes with a work. I never say ‘I will do this’. I love the colours of old drawings, aquatints, sepia prints. When I started painting I wanted to use these ‘colours’.

RO: There are diptychs and triptychs on display in the artworks chosen for ‘Movements of the Soul’. Is there a dialogue between all the paintings? Are they intended as a series?

JvM: With each painting I like to discover something new, to progress, so there is always a programme with different levels of progression, which can make it look like a series of work with the same subject. But I discover the global universe of my work once pieces hang together. I have the impression sometimes all the pieces are just one work.

RO: The 33 works chosen for this exhibition, in ink on board, or pen and ink drawings, are titled ‘Sans Titre’ [Untitled],with only a number to differentiate the works. Has that been a conscious choice of recognition since you began to exhibit professionally?

JvM: I think my paintings have to live their own lives once I have finished my work. I agree with the idea the most difficult thing in painting is to know when it is finished. I would say then you have to disappear, let the painting go. A painting doesn’t need an identity that would induce something in the persons that look at it. Art is a way to touch the invisible reality, which is different for each of us, and make it better, more understandable by having an image through which to approach our own ‘human’ story

RO: Your pen and ink drawings are delicate, intimate, portrayals of people. What spurs you to draw the subjects and do you have models for your drawings?

JvM:  I work the same way as my paintings. No models, only what I feel. It can be a warming up before painting. It can be a way of concentrating when I have to listen. It is often a way to get into an unconscious world when I am surrounded by people in a cafe for example. But for sure I almost always have a blue pen in my hand and can’t stand sitting for more than ten minutes without drawing.

RO: The current exhibition displays art work created in 2011–12.What are you working on now? And what are your plans for 2013?

JvM:  I am more and more convinced that ‘faces’ will be my unique subject. But there is so much to discover about it. There is so much to explore, so many colours that all give different light. Sculpture that is a complete, unbelievable, new and exciting experience, charcoal, etc…. 24 hours a day will never be enough . Hopefully we have got some more lives !

RO: Johan, Thank you for talking to Cassone

Credits

Author:
Rosalind Ormiston
Location:
London
Role:
Independent art historian

Media credit: ©the artist



Editor's notes

Johan Van Mullem's website can be found at www.johanvanmullem.com


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