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Pastel artist Nicolas Party’s vivid landscapes a reflection on our changing relationship with the natural world

  • Swiss artist Nicolas Party’s first solo exhibition in Hong Kong, ‘Red Forest’, references the five elements of the traditional Chinese world view
  • The 13 works include three realistic landscapes of a forest fire, which contrast with the other, more dreamlike works in the exhibition

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Nicolas Party, whose pastel art is showing in his first solo exhibition  in Hong Kong, “Red Forest”. Photo: Nicolas Party/Hauser & Wirth

Hauser & Wirth gallery has brought to Hong Kong 13 new works by in-demand Swiss artist Nicolas Party, who creates surreal landscapes, still lifes and portraits exclusively in pastels, an unusual medium of choice.

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The 42-year-old’s first solo exhibition in the city is called “Red Forest” and begins with an informative video that explains why he works with dry pastel sticks, how they are made and the process by which he blends colours to create the vivid hues that make his works stand out.

The Hong Kong show is a dramatic display that references the five elements of the traditional Chinese world view and reflects Party’s background in stage design.

Party, who divides his time between New York and Brussels, started out as a graffiti artist before going to art school in Lausanne and Glasgow. As a student, he was part of a collective called Blakam, which designed sets for musical performances. It left him with an abiding interest in exhibitions that are an enveloping experience.

Party’s Water Reflection& (2022). Photo: Nicolas Party/Hauser & Wirth
Party’s Water Reflection& (2022). Photo: Nicolas Party/Hauser & Wirth

The exhibition begins on the upper floor of the gallery, where the walls are painted white and pale pink to complement a group of landscapes in mostly light blues and greys.

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This is the “water” room and it features works such as Water Reflection (2022), an abstract scene of mountains and their mirror image on water. The flat, two-dimensional representation resonates with the ubiquity of digital screens in our lives.

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