Oscar Murillo working in his studio in La Paila, Colombia, April 2020
Oscar Murillo’s (b. 1986) surge works are composed of layers of oil-stick marks, built up on the canvas to create a thick impasto of paint, often obscuring content and information beneath. Referencing water’s ability to flow indiscriminately without regard to maps or borders, these paintings speak to one of the artist’s central concerns: cultural exchange. Murillo’s surge works debuted at Kettle’s Yard in 2019, a presentation that led to the artist’s nomination and eventual win for last year’s Turner Prize, which he shared with the other short-listed artists.
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“[I’m] thinking about mark-making and crystalizing mark-making in relation to my energy…to my own anxiety as an individual. And how I can tweak that, calibrate it, and make sure that how I make paintings is not simply an exercise but how does it enter into a dialogue with a canon, a Western canon of making painting.” —Oscar Murillo
“I want them to come into the show and skip a heartbeat. To think about beauty and power, and what art can do.” —Oscar Murillo
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