Frédéric Halbreich Belgian, 1962
24 3/4 x 24 3/4 in
Selection of art decoration project for Hotel Barsey by Warwick, Brussels
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Further images
The APTÈRE series—which includes 16 different works in total (that we didn’t yet put all his works on line)—was inspired by one of the definitions of this word.
The French term Aptère comes from the Greek Apteros, meaning “without wings.”, symbolically speaking for the Greeks, Victory would never leave the city.
In ancient Greek architecture, certain temples—such as the Temple of Athena Nike—were described as apteral, unlike peripteral temples, as they did not have columns along their lateral sides. In other words, they were “without wings” of side columns. This architectural form is more elegant and purified, stripped down to its essential structure.
As the artist completed the composition of the first opus of the series, it evoked for him this type of temple as an image, or a vision in a dream—one in which the entire interior would be visible from the outside.
Provenance
We know the works of Frédéric Halbreich in lacquer, medium of which he is indeed the only artist to have developed his own technique of lacquer and to sparkle the preciousness in the pure art of his abstraction.
The material support of this journey towards elsewhere is lacquer, a means of expression that sets Frédéric Halbreich apart from any painter past and present. It also differentiates him from the great models and references such as Franz Kline and Pierre Soulages.
"The art of lacquer in pure art".
What interests him is the light.
In his lacquers, he brings it out from inside the painting, through the vector of transparency.
He calls "sacrophage" the support on which he creates his lacquers.
Besides these, there are his canvases: oils and acrylics where he derives his expression more from gesture.
Like lacquer work, these pictorial layers (pigments) – ten or more in number – each require an appropriate time to dry. Then follow new meticulous sanding intended to eliminate scratches or accidents.
At the same time, lacquer acts like a mirror, in which the spectator may discover a reality far beyond his own reflection, even a possible answer to his own existential questions.
As an indispensable counterpoint to that mirror which sends the pictorial even beyond abstraction, here are mat surfaces, paradoxically less black in their opacity.
Exposities
April 2026: "Aptère" exhibition, Art Yī, Brussels, BelgiumWelcome Offer for your 1st Art
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