Sleeping Through The War

Reflections from Sepe's travels that led him to ponder upon the nature of war.

On September 29th 2017 Galleria VARSI is proud to open its new spaces in Via di Grotta Pinta 38 and to inaugurate “Sleeping Through The War”, a solo show by the artist SEPE, a major figure in the Polish Urban Art scene.SEPE was born in 1982 in Warsaw, Poland, where he is currently carrying out his artistic research and working as freelance graphic designer and illustrator.In the ‘90s, fascinated by the explosion of graffiti, he experimented with lettering and started expressing himself on the walls of his city. He then moved on to create a pictorial style that reflects his critical vision of today's society, focusing on the distortion of the human figure.SEPE was self-taught until the age of twenty-four when he decided to join the Academy of Fine Arts in Łódź. There painting meets and blends with graphic signs and aesthetics of poster design, to generate original creative solutions on paper, cloth and wall surfaces. To create his works, Sepe blends a variety of media including sprays, acrylics, inks, bituminous pastes, pencils and markers, combining various techniques with great artistic insight.Modern man is at the center of SEPE’s research, where he is presented in the schizophrenic facets of intense compositions as fragmented and deformed, ironic and grotesque.In recent years the artist has painted large murals in France, Spain, Germany, England, Norway, Georgia, Albania, United States, Russia and other countries. He has done four personal exhibitions at the SOON Gallery in Zurich, the Lawrence Alkin Gallery in London, the Baraka Gallery in Krakow, and the Viuro Gallery in Warsaw and has participated in collective exhibitions around the world."Sleeping Through The War" collects reflections from some of Sepe's art travels, during which his interaction with local cultures have led him to ponder upon the nature of war.The works created for the exhibition are a "visual reportage", real-life reactions translated into oniric imagery, where chaos and logic paradoxically coexist.The artist remembers in particular a sunny Sunday afternoon a year ago on the Red Square in Moscow where he was intrigued by a leaflet describing a "Family Picnic". There he found an unexpected scenario: no balloons or sweets but dozens of children in military uniform that were teaching other children inside a series of tents on "how to make war", real war. Pistols, Kalashnikov, precision rifles and authentic weapons of all kinds were casually being handled by very young people training their peers in combat, under the encouraging eyes of their families.In Russia, there are widespread patriotic military organizations for children and adolescents; these include IunArmia (from the Russian Iunost, youth, and Armia, Army) founded in 2016 by the current Russian Minister of Defense Sergei Kužugetovič Šojgu, an organization already operational in more than eighty Russian regions and growing exponentially, a real "army of children" structured in various detachments (paratroopers, aviators, tankers ...), specifically created to instruct young people to war."Sleeping Through The War" stems from this brutish and crazy anecdote.Galleria VARSI is a Theater of the Absurd that welcomes artists at the margin of an estranged and unstable society, caged by media, where war becomes a product to be distributed. According to SEPE, "the increasingly vivid and disturbing ‘rhetoric of war’ is present not only in the world of politics and the media, but also in social life – closer and closer to us. War is the most profitable and cynical business and death is the hottest, media selling news. Violence and ignorance are an attractive, bestseller element of pop culture, while guns are stylish, fancy gadgets – an entertainment symbol.” The conflict is clear in the contradictions that invade his characters. Men, women and children participate to the show of violence, alienated and desolate, lost in the masses and dominated by senseless forces. "Sleeping Through The War" is an extravagant, cruel, ironic and dramatic mirror in which the viewers reflect themselves and are forced to reflect.

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