Triptych: The
Last
Supper
– 1/3 by OtGO 2020–2021, acryl
on
canvas 215 x 300 cm
Maryna Magnin
Savoie, France – Octobre
2022
OtGO:
Triptych
The
Last Supper
--
The
original text in French --
-- The
text in German --
Translated by Caroline Girod. The English translation made public on 10 february 2023 Sliema, Malta
If
there is, in my humble opinion, one word that could describe the work
of the artist OtGO, it would be the word magician. He has indeed the
incredible ability to bring his paintings to life. He gives them birth
by creating them and then lets them grow and intensify under the eyes
of those who contemplate them. Little by little, they become alive and
animated. They come out of their frame, spill out and invade the room,
leaving behind them a perfume that is at once sweet, bitter, and
enigmatic. The Triptych: The Last Supper is a perfect example.
To begin with,
one has to look at the paintings from afar while getting immersed in
them. Soon, we will have the impression of attending a wild party or a
particularly colorful carnival. The giant octopus, as if animated by a
great number of dancers, moves slowly, with grace and lightness. If one
listens carefully and dives into this universe, it becomes possible to
hear music: some jazz, some piano notes, but also percussion sounds.
Then, whistling, laughter of children and passers-by, and finally
applause reach our ears. Everyone is drawn into an intoxicating waltz,
without beginning or end. Only joy and intoxication remain. Warm colors
like yellow and red contrast with white, blue, and black shades. They
jump to our eyes and cling to our stunned faces. And here we are,
charmed, drawn into this sweet atmosphere of celebration and happiness,
our hearts beating. Soon the heat becomes noticeable, but it does not
matter because the ambience is great.
Triptych: The Last Supper by OtGO | Inside the Studio:
Work in Progress | Photo by Anna Wyszomierska
However,
getting closer to the painting and connecting our little grey cells, as
a certain Hercule Poirot would say, is enough for the mask to fall and
the reality to be revealed. The puzzle then begins to fall into place,
a much darker and much less cheerful puzzle. Then, the music changes
its tonality, and something gently breaks in our hearts, like glass
cracking. Impossible to put it back together. We understand that we
should look past appearances, and that we will have to dive deeper into
these paintings to discover the truth. The details spurt out of every
corner of the paintings, forcing us to a long contemplation to find the
answers to our questions.The sounds of drums and piano are quickly replaced by the sound of
flames. Laughter and applause are replaced by moans, cries, and pleas.
The scene changes completely: we are no longer attending a party or a
colorful carnival. After a few minutes of contemplation, we have gone
from heaven to hell. The atmosphere becomes suffocating, and our
panicked eyes fight tirelessly to find positivity, cheerfulness, and
happiness. The blood-red eyes of the octopus cut off sharply this attempt, most
probably doomed to failure. This creature stretches out and takes a
central place in all three canvases. In The Last Supper 3,
the creature resembles a bloodthirsty monster or some Terminator,
lifeless and merciless, with only one goal: to crush and kill.
Therefore, the humans’ tears and lamentations do not worry him at all,
and his powerful tentacles are ready to seize his prey. This octopus
becomes the ideal symbol to paint the virus that has fallen upon us and
its many consequences.
For some, the
octopus is the embodiment of hellish spirits, if not hell itself. Just
like the virus, the octopus is silent, whatever the circumstances. It
is the very example of adaptation and its ability to go unnoticed is
extraordinary. This dazzling adaptation to its environment often
involves mimicry and transformation. Like a magician, the octopus
changes color according to its moods or needs by blending into the
scenery, or goes even one step further by changing its shape. Moreover,
its body being devoid of skeleton, it is very flexible. From the human
point of view, these abilities impress and terrify. It is therefore not
surprising that exactly this creature was chosen to embody both the
monstrous Kraken, the concrete form of absolute evil hidden at the
bottom of the waters, and the virus in OtGO’s paintings. Invisible and
highly contagious, the latter plunged the entire planet into chaos,
isolation, and grief. Like the octopus, the virus has adapted, giving
rise to variants that continue to appear even today. It has no smell,
no color and above all no face. And what cannot be seen has always been
feared. The unknown, whether positive or negative, is terrifying. We
have no weapons, no instructions to help us. We have to get out of our comfort zone, learn again how to live, and
sometimes even how to survive by adapting to our new environment.
Detailed view: The Last Supper
To
emphasize the symbolic of disease, the cephalopod’s head is filled with
human skulls and viral particles. The latter are escaping, huge or in a
fine rain, until invading the whole canvas. After all, these small
stains that looked from afar like colorful lights or joyful confetti,
are in fact the representatives of this silent death. Observed from afar, the head of the octopus itself becomes a gigantic
human skull. This element is not so surprising after all, since it is
mankind who has created or at least actively participated in the
creation of this chaos.
Detailed view: The Last Supper
Human
skulls are everywhere. They lie on the ground, in piles or scattered,
sad representatives of a human life that is running out of breath. The
survivors, forced to wander in the dark, understand only too well the
fate that awaits them. Gathered together, the skulls remind us of
ancient times when, in order to preserve those still alive, the bodies
contaminated by the plague or cholera epidemic were piled up and then
burned or quickly buried. As we continue our meticulous work of observation, the paintings reveal
to our eyes the presence of human souls. These souls, forced to leave
their bodies and their earthly existence, sadly look back at their
remains before slowly making their way to nothingness.
Detailed view: The Last Supper
The
epidemic has snatched them from life without warning like lightning in
the middle of a clear and peaceful day. They no longer have faces, nor
bodies, nor names. As Ernest Hemingway rightly said, "We must get used
to it: at the most important crossroads of our lives, there are no
signs". Only their silhouettes, almost transparent, remain for a while.
Are they Men or Women? One could not say it. In the face of
nothingness, nothing of all this subsists.
Detailed view: The Last Supper
The
few humans still alive are not in any more luck. Some of them are
nonetheless trying to flee while protecting their bodies with their
hands. A mother, her child in her arms, is fighting to survive. Other
women, who appear to be pregnant, are trying to save the life that is
growing inside them. Unfortunately, despite the felt discomfort,
despite the complaints of the tortured, we cannot save them. Only our
eyes can brush them. The presence of orange brushstrokes on the black
background of the canvases sends us back to the flames and the extreme
heat. Very quickly, the feeling of being in an oven or a fireplace
settles in us. No exit door on the horizon, not the slightest escape
either.
Yet, among the human beings in the paintings, some seem to suffer
less than others. Much taller and heavier, in an almost supernatural
way, they don't seem to care about what is happening around them.
Sitting, lying or almost gravitating, their look expresses complete
indifference, if not even contempt towards the fate reserved to their
peers who are shouting, agitating, and finally dying. Their chubby
bodies, sometimes pushed to an extreme obesity, refer to the series of
paintings of Lucian Freud and resound as a tribute to the work of the
artist. Incidentally, the pose of certain characters is easily recognizable and
refers directly to the paintings of Freud: "Naked man, back view"
(1991-1992), "Naked portrait with reflection" (1980) or "Benefits
Supervisor Sleeping II" (1995). The bodies of these people represent
greed, cupidity, the thirst for power and money. They need more, always
more, because only that counts, only that obsesses them. Hence the fact
that they seem elsewhere, completely out of this world. Even though
they are alive, their humanity is lost. They are nothing more than
empty shells, insensitive and isolated beings.
Detailed view: The Last Supper
Detailed view: The Last Supper
By dint of
excess, the human race has pushed its own existence to destruction and
suffering. This can be seen very clearly in OtGO's paintings. Only the
humans are suffering from the situation. The monkeys are feasting. The
presence of forks, plates and champagne flutes clearly indicates that
this situation, terrible for mankind, is a real blessing for the
animals. The octopus's tentacles become tables, and nothing disturbs
their good mood. They are raising their glasses, as if toasting, while
taunting the frightened and weakened humans. The contrast created by
OtGO between the two situations is striking and pushes the spectators
that we are to look reality in the face. We then become witnesses of our collective suicide, for our eyes have
brushed the canvases. Some bipeds, crowned like kings, seem to lead
this little party. When some see their cup rising, others see their
head falling.
Detailed view: The Last Supper
More
cruel than the party primates, huge gorillas make this scene even more
violent by transforming it into a place of war and desolation: larger
than the others, with oversized genitals and rifles in their hands,
they are scrutinizing the few humans still alive. The appearance of the latter, completely naked and left to their fate,
reminds us of the horrors that humanity has inflicted on itself and on
animal life throughout History. Painted on a red background, halo above
their heads, the torturers seem to put on suits of sanctity while
punishing criminal souls. Just like in Pierre de Marivaux's Slave Island (L'île des Esclaves),
the masters have become the slaves and the slaves, the new masters. But
unlike Marivaux's book, no forgiveness is possible. Impulses and
violence have prevailed over reason and mercy.
Detailed view:The Last Supper
Another
important element present in the paintings: money. Usually so precious
to humans, it is here amassed in huge piles just like the skulls and
practically forgotten. It is of no use here and is abandoned, like a
futile piece of plastic. This money, made by men, for men, cannot save
them from an invisible and silent threat. Illustrating to perfection the decay of the consumer society that
glorifies and elevates all that glitters, money reveals here its dark
side and appears shamefully inefficient. In the deepest chaos, when the
survival of humanity is at stake, it becomes derisory again. Its
preciousness is known only to men. Just like banknotes, reduced to
their original state of paper during major stock market crashes, gold
coins are reduced to the state of metal. Out of revenge or perhaps
mockery, little red monkeys are having fun throwing survivors into the
gold pile, thus giving them a bitter lesson. Like Midas, condemned to see everything he touches turn into gold, the
men are drowned in this gold for which they once were ready to make any
sacrifice.
Detailed view: The Last Supper
Looking
at the three paintings one after the other, a new impression can arise:
that of having before one’s eyes a single canvas, painted in profile
and then in front. The octopuses, in the center of the three paintings,
become then one and the same creature, although the shape of the
tentacles changes between the paintings. This can be explained by the
fact that OtGO's artwork often represents the idea of movement. To
realize this titanic work, requiring extreme meticulousness, OtGO
used the same techniques as for the realization of Thangkas, these
small colored paintings representing several deities or Buddhas. This
work, similar to a meditation, requires a great concentration and a
complete letting go of what is happening in the outside world.
In the end, this Triptych is aptly named. This dinner may be the last
one, as much for the human race as for the apes sitting at the table,
they who are the symbols of the origin of humans on Earth. In a world
that pretends to be more and more controlled, the episode of the Corona
virus reveals to us that we are the masters only of our hearts. There
lies our heritage and the object of our salvation. Nature alarms us,
but we remain silent, blind, mute. After all, it is impossible to wake
up someone who is pretending to sleep. But who knows, hope springs
eternal.