Alexis Ralaivao
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BiographyBorn in Rennes, France, 1991
Lives & Works in Rennes, France -
Portrait by Rose Lacavalla.
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Ralaivao lives and works in his home city of Rennes, France, after spending several years in Berlin. In 2022, he was profiled in The Artsy Vanguard. His work is held in institutional collections in the United States and abroad, including the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas; the Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami; Musée des Beaux Arts de Rennes, France; Powerlong Museum, Shanghai, China; and the He Art Museum, China.
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Works
Alexis Ralaivao
La source lumineuse, 2022oil on canvas78 3/4 x 51 1/8 inches
200 x 130 cmCopyright The ArtistExhibitions-
Alexis Ralaivao: Éloge de l’ombre (In Praise of Shadows)
May 15 – July 25, 2025 509 West 27th Street, New YorkFor Éloge de l’ombre (In Praise of Shadows), Ralaivao unveils a suite of new paintings rendered entirely in black and white. Working within the self-imposed parameters of a reduced palette, Ralaivao sharpens his attention to composition, light and shadow. In arresting portraits and still life tableaux, Ralaivao magnifies the most subtle of details at grand scale by strategically framing his subjects. Influenced by film noir, Ralaivao’s works absorb the viewer into a romanticized world of drama and suspense as if the viewer has arrived at a narrative in media res.View More -
Alexis Ralaivao: On s’enrichit de ce que l’on donne, on s’appauvrit de ce que l’on prend
June 8 – August 11, 2023 297 Tenth Avenue, New YorkFeaturing eleven new oil paintings, the exhibition reveals recent developments among Ralaivao’s signature detail views of human figures and the proprieties they observe. Articulating a sentimental ethnography of contemporary virtues and comportments, Ralaivao’s softly-rendered studies are drawn from 21st-century social life.View More
News-
Alexis Ralaivao: Éloge de l’ombre (In Praise of Shadows) reviewed in The Brooklyn Rail
by Alfred Mac Adam July 1, 2025So arch, so witty, so guided by ideas is Alexis Ralaivao’s show that it might be construed as a revival of the anti-realist Mannerism of Pontormo or Rosso Fiorentino. Ralaivao’s perverse version of Mannerism manifests itself first in the concetto (or conceit) that these twelve oils on canvas are painted exclusively in black and white, so they are in effect paintings made to imitate photographs from an era before color photography. Ralaivao is not like a Weegee armed with brushes, so he avoids overt violence, managing instead to capture instants of passion, of erotic arousal, even ecstasy. The origin of these powerful but subtly expressed passions lurks in the source of his title, Jun’ichirō Tanizaki’s 1934 essay “In Praise of Shadows.” Ralaivao’s titles allude to matters Tanizaki discusses, but his work is far from a mere illustration of the Japanese novelist’s ideas.View More -
Alexis Ralaivao joins Kasmin
March 13, 2024Kasmin is delighted to welcome Alexis Ralaivao (b. 1991, France) to the gallery.View More
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