Stanislava Kovalcikova: Cautionary Tales at MAMOTH

May 28, 2020
Stanislava Kovalcikova: Cautionary Tales at MAMOTH
MAMOTH is pleased to present a solo exhibition, Cautionary Tales by Stanislava Kovalcikova, the artist’s first solo exhibition with the gallery. 
 
Drawing on contemporary and historical perspectives of the female nude, Kovalcikova uses paint as a tool for an introspective examining of the body, her works directly referencing sixteenth to nineteenth century paintings.
 
Kovalcikova grew up in Slovakia. In the early nineties, her surroundings were rapidly transformed from long decades of Communist rule to a young capitalist system. Economic efficiency, consumption and marketability became the driving forces of society. Kovalcikova believes art is different, and that it is therefore immoral to propose a ready-made solution at the end of the process. 
 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
 
Using a palette of umber, crimson and jade, Kovalcikova’s canvasses reference the canonical paintings of Giorgione, Titian and Velasquez. Her subjects’ longing gazes offer a similar mystique to those of the Renaissance muses. Quite often her protagonists are looking away – never at the observer, and each at something different – their haunting expressions suggestive of our dual personalities and inner demons. Applied to look like collage, Kovalcikova's minglings of people are left to moulder on the surface, their facial characteristics melting away. 
 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
Snake's nest, 2016, Oil on canvas, 100cm×85cm ©MAMOTH 
Snake's nest, 2016, Oil on canvas, 100cm×85cm ©MAMOTH 
 
Nordic rappers, 2016, Oil on hessian, 120cm×90cm ©MAMOTH 
Nordic rappers, 2016, Oil on hessian, 120cm×90cm ©MAMOTH 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
 
The way Kovalcikova works with paint is textural, laden with layers and different processes. She enjoys researching and experimenting with materials and unconventional painting media. She is especially interested in old techniques from masters. Through her job as assistant to the painting material department, she had access to old pigments, mediums, recipes and texts. She often sands her paintings up to ten times and starts painting again on the residue of the underneath image. 
 
 
Operator, 2019, Oil on linen, 140cm×100cm ©MAMOTHOperator, 2019, Oil on linen, 140cm×100cm ©MAMOTH 
 
Welcome, winners and losers, 2015, Oil on linen, 120cm×100cm ©MAMOTHWelcome, winners and losers, 2015, Oil on linen, 120cm×100cm ©MAMOTH 
 
 
“I collected old pigments mainly, and I use a lots of different recipes to create the background. Most of my paintings won’t leave my studio earlier than three years. But often, the main question will always be - who are these people?" 
 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
Metamorphosis diptych, 2020, Oil on linen, 164cm×91cm ©MAMOTHMetamorphosis diptych, 2020, Oil on linen, 164cm×91cm ©MAMOTH 
 
 
The characters in Kovalcikova's painting are often a depiction of inner states of herself or comes from her dreams. Sometimes characters from her family, her friends and people of public interest also enter her canvasses. 
 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
 
“Usually my topic is pure imagination but at the same time I cannot paint unless I feel I know something up to the detail. Another very important source of my creation is my remembrance of my childhood. I recollect how, as a little girl, I looked at things around me and could not stop watching with emotions like astonishment and surprise.” 
 
 
Annunciation, 2020 Oil on canvas, 160cm×126cm ©MAMOTHAnnunciation, 2020 Oil on canvas, 160cm×126cm ©MAMOTH 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
Annunciation (detail), 2020 Oil on canvas, 160cm×126cm ©MAMOTHAnnunciation (detail), 2020 Oil on canvas, 160cm×126cm ©MAMOTH 
 
 
“ Many viewers wonder why I often depict people of colour. I sense the same familiarity with these characters, and have integrated this from a very early stage in my practice. I thought a lot about outsiders and invisible structures of power before cultural diversity and rehabilitation of the Black body became fashionable. ” 
 
 
Spider's nest, 2019, Oil on linen, 60cm×60cm ©MAMOTHSpider's nest, 2019, Oil on linen, 60cm×60cm ©MAMOTH 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTHInstallation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 

Ladyrinth, 2020, Oil on hessian, 190cm×115cm ©MAMOTH
 

Ladyrinth, 2020, Oil on hessian, 190cm×115cm ©MAMOTH
 
The female body is, on the one the hand, a symbol for appeal, attraction and beauty, and, on the other hand, a symbol of the origin of all life. Becoming a mother herself at a young age has profoundly shaped Kovalcikova's vision as an artist. Her identity as a mother also has raised her curiosity about how to represent women and beauty. "My own body and sexuality offer me a new way to look at things, not with the narcissist glasses of the author, but the equilibrium between reality and subjectivism. Besides my own identity, I also draw inspiration from classical master paintings such as Cranach’s women, Velazquez’s Venus del Espejo or Goya's Mayas, Ingres’s Odalisque, Manet’s Olympia, Renoir’s women, Bonnard’s bathers or Matisse’s models, as well as Picasso’s Marie Therese. Kahlo’s and Modersohn-Becker’s self-portraits, Carrington’s girls, Dumas’s and Neel’s female nudes. I think of these paintings as powerful symbols of situations in which the figure of a woman can appear." 
 
 
Golden portrait, 2016, Oil on linen, 66cm×52cm ©MAMOTH 
Golden portrait, 2016, Oil on linen, 66cm×52cm ©MAMOTH 
 
 
” I am fascinated by faces and expressions and have a massive collection of portraits for my research. My practice is also mainly develops around the characters in my paintings. There are a lot of portraits I painted, which come quite fast and naturally. In my more significant works, I use these as some kind of studies for the characters I developed. There is always some kind of interaction and often social tension, even if it just a single woman laying on the floor. So there is always some kind of invisible third person. “ 
 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
The winner takes it all, 2019, Oil and collage on canvas, 80cm×40cm ©MAMOTHThe winner takes it all, 2019, Oil and collage on canvas, 80cm×40cm ©MAMOTH 
 
"I feel that I can leave in the viewer a torment that can engender meditation, instead of offering a euphoric solution at any price. It's the feel where I built up detention in my paintings. I believe people have a light and dark side, everyone has one, and I tried to put that into my paintings. I evolve my praxis as a Platonian 'skepsi' - a continual search." 
 
 
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH
Installation view, Cautionary Tales, MAMOTH, 2020 ©MAMOTH 
 
 

  
 
Stanislava Kovalcikova (b. 1988, Slovakia) lives and works in Düsseldorf. Drawing on the contemporary and historical perspective of the female nude, Kovalcikova uses paint as a tool for introspective examining of the body, where her works directly reference 16th-19th century paintings. Her works have been shown at the Museum of Modern Art in Warsaw, Mendes Wood DM in Brussels and Tramps in London.