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Artist Information:
Ely Magos
Vienna,
Austria
Member Since: Oct 2001
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Artist Exhibitions:
2006 permanent
Exhibitions in the Gallery
Kunsthandel Graz

2005 19.Juni Tag der
offenen Tür Atelier / Galerie


2005 Gallery 47
London Group Exhibition

2005 Projekt
Stubenberg Konzeption &
Gestaltung einer

multikonfessionelen Kapelle
Andachtsraum

2004 Gallery 47
London

2004 Cyberloft
Gallery New York

2004 Arte Casa Port
Andratx


2004 Exhibition in
...

Further Information

Artist Galleries:
Direct sales by Ely Magos
contactmail:
ElyMagos@gmail.com




1849, Alex Gallery


National and international
contemporary artists:
painting, sculpture and
drawing in representational,
figurative, impressionist,
abstract and expressionist
styles. G/D/C

Artists exhibited: Connie
Bryson, Frank Cappello,
Olivier Debre, Madalina
Nicola, Andreas Niederhammer,
Hannu Palosuo, Pablo Picasso,
Jackson Pollock, ...

Further Information
Artist Reviews:
http://www.kleinezeitung.at/nac
hrichten/kultur/artikel/_572903
/index.jsp


Mago Introduction

Eleanor Kennelly writes for
ARTnews, Art & Antiques, and
Art & Auction. She served as
art critic and columnist for
The Washington Times.


There is a strong, playful
streak in Mago’s mixed-media
paintings. A swaying lobster,
a bird’...

Further Information
Collections:
Prof. Dr. Michael Bader
Max-Delbrück-Centrum für
Molekulare Medizin
Dr. Werner Perscha Notar Graz
Dr.Peter Wenger Notar Graz
Dr.Dösinger Graz
Prohaska Marseille
Prof.Dr.Dr.Schachner -
Blasicek Graz
UNIQA Stiegler - Stoff Lieboch
/Stainz
Gemeinde Mooskirchen
Gemeinde Gleisdorf
Landesmuseum am Joanneum Neue
Galerie Graz
Bundeskanzleramt ...

Further Information
Commissions:
Coming Soon!

Artist Statement for Ely Magos

Mago Introduction
1849, Alex Gallery

2106 R St NW 20008


Web site: www.alexgalleries.com

Tue-Sat 11-5 and by appt Dir: Victor Gaetan

National and international contemporary artists: painting, sculpture and drawing in representational, figurative, impressionist, abstract and expressionist styles. G/D/C

Artists exhibited: Connie Bryson, Frank Cappello, Olivier Debre, Madalina Nicola, Mago Ely Magos, Hannu Palosuo, Pablo Picasso, Jackson Pollock, Norman Rockwell, Linda Touby, Hans Versteeg, Maciek von Ato


Eleanor Kennelly writes for ARTnews, Art & Antiques, and Art & Auction. She served as art critic and columnist for The Washington Times.

There is a strong, playful streak in Mago’s mixed-media paintings. A swaying lobster, a bird’s eye view of traffic, a seal tossing off colorful clothing¯these are carefree images made by a thoughtful artist who enjoys a sense of humor. Mago is Ely Magos. He’s a clever Austrian artist with a commanding variety of styles and interests.

Vivid yellow pigment makes a buoyant background for the funny picture Atlantis Undressed Seadog which can be read as a trained seal shedding speckled apparel in several directions. (The word seal in German is seehund, which can be translated into English, literally, as seadog.)

But it’s also a serious painting bringing together several important themes. First, it is part of the Atlantis series of paintings produced by the artist over the last few years. Atlantis is a lost paradise, first described by Plato in the 4th century BC as a continent which had sunk into the Atlantic Ocean. In Plato’s telling, Atlantis is not just a historical civilization, but a symbol of spiritual quest, especially, the quest for knowledge about the origin of the universe.

For Mago, the act of painting is a function of his spiritual quest, one which has led him around the world from New York to Finland, from Egypt and Israel to France and Ukraine.

In Atlantis Undressed Seadog, the eye is led dynamically from the central subject to radiating shapes, out and back, in order to solve the question, “What is going on here? What is this?” As human beings, we are constantly in his position: trying to make sense out of information fragments. In Mago’s piece, the title provides a narrative “hook” that gives the viewer one solution. The title is not essential, though. Between the contrasting colors yellow and gray, and the diagonal composition of shapes, the eye’s adventure is also the point.

In Jumping Whale, a tear-shaped form dominates the canvas. As a representative picture of a whale, it reduces the mammal to pure form, one step from abstraction. The painting is elegant in its simplicity. It zooms in on an aspect of whale-ness that is strange and remarkable: the ocean-living beast breathes air. It seeks a universe beyond the one it inhabits. As the artist does.

A similar piece compositionally is Atlantis Lobster. One bold shape animates the picture plane. Numerous pieces by Mago explore the relationship between form and function. For a crustacean, form is function. It’s efficient exo-skeleton allows it to survive and forage on the ocean floor.

In a pair of paintings, Forms and Colors I and New York City Traffic, we see an interesting relationship between abstraction and representation. Forms and Colors I is a lyrical study of organic shapes floating in a milky atmosphere. Red and yellow forms fill the foreground while black outlined boxes line up behind. It’s a kinetic composition that could signify chemical compositions, family relations, or anything else. Mostly, it is a pleasant un-decodable piece.

New York City Traffic features similar colors and forms: but here, parading black boxes move to the front and splotches of red and yellow ooze beneath. Because a viewer approaches the piece with a story in mind (assuming the viewer reads the title), an urban landscape appears immediately. This just shows how impressionable the mind is. Hanging on a few words, the mind conjures a picture and assigns meaning to it. As a painting of Manhattan traffic, the boxes become cars and the colored shapes stand for life obscured by regiment, or limit-breaking ideas that don’t conform to the rule-oriented metropolis.

Mago works in numerous styles. His work is representational, abstract, and symbolic. He paints portraits and makes sculpture. The very fact that Mago simultaneously exhibits work in various styles suggests that exploration and discovery are what propel him to make art. Since, ultimately, meaning and the search for it are the foundation of his art, most of his oeuvre is either recognizable, or titled to create strong associations.

When I first examined paintings from the Aleph series, I was at a loss. I didn’t recognize the shapes and without that knowledge I could hardly understand the work. Some research revealed what an interesting symbol this is. An ancient Semitic sign, aleph is the first letter of the 22-character Hebrew alphabet, with both a qualitative (letter) and


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