Perrotin is pleased to present Repeated Original by Gabriel de la Mora. Throughout his career, the artist has developed an exploration of painting without paint: planes that retain pictorial qualities but dispense with the pigments traditionally associated with the medium. In this pursuit, he has worked with materials taken directly from nature—human hair, butterfly wings, bird feathers, obsidian, andesite—as well as repurposed materials—shoe soles, bicycle inner tubes, glass microscope slides. Far from neutral, these materials carry histories, whether embedded in their DNA, in their chemical composition, or the marks left by use and wear.
Gabriel de la Mora returns to one of the materials with which he initiated his investigation into painting without paint in 2012: eggshell, present in his CaCO₃ series—named after the chemical formula for calcium carbonate, the shell’s main component. At that time, the artist sought a minimal expression of painting: a white monochrome surface that could only be achieved, paradoxically, through an exhaustive process of fragmenting, selecting, and arranging thousands of eggshell fragments across a plane.
The works gathered in Repeated Original exemplify a practice grounded in repetitive processes, understood as a form of active meditation. Repetition here is continuity and, at the same time, transformation: it does not operate as a style, but as an evolutionary mechanism, as if each series were a species undergoing change. The original series gradually moved beyond monochrome to incorporate geometric patterns that intersperse eggshell fragmentsof varying sizes and tonalities, as seen in 2,155 (666 concave and 1489 convex eggshell fragments). In 2019, the artist began a new series, Between What I Reflect and What I See, replacing eggshells with spherical aluminium-coated glass.
This material shift also entails an optical turn. While eggshell disperses light in a diffuse and disordered manner, aluminized glass reflects it specularly, producing recognizable, albeit unstable, images. By working with concave and convex surfaces, De la Mora introduces distortions that generate an illusion of depth and a fragmentation of the visual field. Reflections move in opposing directions, a phenomenon the artist refers to as visual dyslexia, in which the image appears decentered, inverted, or fractured. These series evolve toward a hybrid configuration that brings eggshell and glass together, as in 11,973 (8,570 eggshell fragments,1,939 concave and 1,464 convex glass fragments), where both modes of light reflection coexist.
Due to their scale, some of these work create an immersive experience—such as 10,132 (5,113 convex and 5,019 concave eggshell fragments) or 27,798 (9,307 concave and 18,491 convex glass fragments). The glass pieces generate a kind of self-portrait in which the viewer takes the place of the artist. The resulting image is far removed from a selfie, that omnipresent genre of our time: it is a multiplicity of fragments that alternating sections of glass invert and separate, creating planes that produce a sense of estrangement, akin to the moment of first encountering one’s reflection in a mirror.
The curvature of the fragments in CaCO₃ and Between What I Reflect and What I See produces a tangible volume upon the pictorial plane, from which the artist moves toward three-dimensionality. The plane closes in on itself, as if under the pressure of an irrational gesture, as seen in 1,514 (522 glass fragments and 922 eggshell fragments). As the form of the works change, so too does their visual regime: these pieces inhabit an intermediate territory between surface and object, where painting and sculpture coexist. The image fragments, multiplies, or dissolves depending on the angle from which it is observed.
Situated between monochrome and geometric abstraction, between image and object, these series invite us to consider the image from a perspective that moves beyond traditional debates around color, abstraction, or representation. Instead, they propose a reflection on the very nature of images and, ultimately, on how we perceive them. From this perspective, the image is not the object itself, but the state of light after it has interacted with its surface. De la Mora makes evident that images belong neither to the object nor to the viewer; they are a transient state of light, a precarious and mutable phenomenon that emerges—and dissolves—at the encounter between matter and gaze. —Eric Nava Muñoz
Born in Mexico City, Mexico.
Lives and works in Mexico City, Mexico.
Gabriel de la Mora, born in 1968 in Mexico City where he currently lives and works, is best known for constructing visual works from found, discarded, and obsolete objects. In an obsessive process of collecting and fragmenting materials - eggshells, shoe soles, speaker screens, feathers - the Mexican artist creates seemingly minimal and often monochrome-looking surfaces that belie great technical complexity, conceptual rigor, and embedded information.
De la Mora has exhibited at the Drawing Center, New York, Museo Nacional de Arte (MUNAL), Mexico City, Mexico, Museo Jumex, Mexico City, Mexico, King Abdulaziz Center for World Culture - Ithra, Dhahran, Saudi Arabia, and the Museo Amparo, Puebla, Mexico, among others. His work is part of collections including the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo, New York; El Museo del Barrio, New York; Colección Jumex, Mexico City; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; and Pérez Art Museum Miami, among others.