Najean by Y Galerie
Born in 1957, Jean-Pascal Najean lives and works in Rocheservière (Vendée, department 85 of France).
After starting out as a wood turner and carpenter, he moved into other areas and then one day got bored.
He picked up a piece of wood and passion took over his life. Every one of Najean’s sculpture is a tribute to woman, in particular his wife Séverine, who adds the finish to his works.
Today Najean is one of our greatest contemporary woodcarvers.
Najean’s “girls” are not women; they are hyperboles of woman, or rather femininity. Hence the constant desire to streamline, remove the anecdotal, simplify the details, and get to the essential. The distorted shapes, the slender curve of their bearing and the free-flowing lines all serve to convey a rare, fleeting but essential moment, captured in the body of the model or the creator’s imagination. Nonchalant or provocative, they have no face, yet their gaze pierces you more deeply than if they did have eyes.
Works available
Black elegante
Lime wood sculpture
Height 51 cm
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Pop Art elegante
Lime wood sculpture
Height 160 cm
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White elegante
Lime wood sculpture
Height 51 cm
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Mr Lolo
In 1987, after meeting with poet and femme fatale Miss.Tic, Mr. Lolo decided to devote himself entirely to the street stencil adventure. Together, they walk the streets of Paris, go to bistros in Pigalle and trendy clubs: they are inseparable. The race against the cops, always keen to hunt down anyone caught vandalising the public space, often ends badly and they end up behind bars.
Mr. Lolo’s work contains various aesthetic, cultural and sexual paradoxes. The multiple and the unique. Darkness and brilliance. Decadence and purity. The street and the boudoir. Potion and poison. Dual identity. This permanent game of duplicity is reflected in his subjects and in his technique in equal measure.
Some think there is nothing more unsophisticated in terms of pictorial technique than the stencil. The use of cut-outs and spray cans generally creates “flat, simple works, doomed to rapid degradation and multiple uses.
With a level of skill borne of devotion, Mr. Lolo asserts and proves the opposite. He reinterprets stencils and sublimates them. His fine sense of detail, as seen among the Art Nouveau painters and poster designers such as Alfons Mucha, is a game-changer.
According to Philippe Fontaine, his stencils seem to have been cut not with a box cutter, but a scalpel; their precision is surgical. Through the use of mixed techniques, blending acrylic, ink spray and sequins, his portraits have a special volume and thickness, a particular expressiveness, a fragile side but also a troubled one. The use of the stencil, whose main purpose is to multiply the work almost infinitely, is denied: his works are unique. The addition of hand-glued sequins enhances the contrast by creating a shiny gold or silver effect.
Sad angel
Ink and Aerosol on canvas
20x20 cm
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69
Aerosol on canvas
61x50 cm
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Cat
Ink and Aerosol on canvas
20 20 cm
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