Mariane Ibrahim is pleased to present Ligne(s) de vie, a solo exhibition by Slimen Elkamel, whose figures drift through weightless, theatrical spaces, liberated from realism and gravity.
Working on black-primed canvases, Elkamel builds his images through thousands of tiny acrylic dots, as if opening the jaws of a monstrous creature made of darkness and liberating the devoured lights from its interior, returning them to the world, alive and undulating. The analogy is not so much that of the artist as a hero, but rather that of the artist as a storyteller, gently weaving a narrative that allows us, by observing it, to become co-authors.
Rooted in the oral traditions of rural Tunisia and inspired by his daily writing practice, Elkamel treats storytelling as a plastic, flexible material—transforming with each retelling, becoming more intense, moving, or joyful depending on the moment. Like tales that are never told the same way twice, his paintings are open narratives that vibrate between memory, emotion, and color.
Formally, the artist navigates a semi-abstract, perspective-free space that is both narrative and self-referential, creating autonomous universes that recall the visionary fantasies of Henry Darger as much as the mosaics of ancient Mediterranean civilizations. His layered pictorial structures evoke works from the Italian Primitives, where narrative planes stack around mountains, forests, and skies.
Elkamel’s visual language, steeped in magical realism and ecological sensitivity, offers a sensuous meditation on transformation, memory, and renewal through a proximity with the natural world. His technique resonates with the history of mechanical image-making, where color emerges from the strict arrangement of microscopic dots into orderly grids. Elkamel disrupts this logic: his points break free from alignment, refusing to coalesce into a single image. This refusal becomes a gesture of resistance, inviting us to step away from the regimented, pixelated world of mass reproduction and toward a more tactile, analog realm: one that feels alive, pulsing, and imperfect, like the rhythm of nature itself.
In Ligne(s) de vie, Elkamel invites us to slow down and reorient our senses toward intuition, imagination, and attentive seeing. His work reminds us that rest, like reverie, is generative; through the act of dreaming with the land, we may begin to rediscover other ways of being, becoming, and belonging.