Ayyam Gallery is proud to present Inside Out ‘25 an exhibition featuring Elias Izoli’s most recent body of work. After a
long hiatus from painting, Izoli returns with a new body of work centered around the circus of life.
A childhood fascination evolved into a profound reflection on the unpredictability and complexity of life as a Syrian citizen. In his latest series, Izoli uses the circus as a metaphor: its performers, from tightrope walkers to clowns and magicians, embody the tension between joy and survival. The circus and its family become a symbol of the broader social body, with each character representing the individuals who comprise the state’s fabric. With concealed motives that slowly unravel under closer inspection, Izoli reveals an environment we, as spectators, have only observed from the outside. He invites us inside the fortress-like walls, offering a view from within.
Rendered in his signature fragmented color style, each painting presents a portrait that speaks to resilience, illusion and the spectacle of existence. Figures of entertainment, marred by despair and sadness, mirror Izoli’s reflections on the toll conflicts have on everyday life. Some hide behind curtains, others peer out, offering viewers a guarded gaze from within a fortress-like world. Each character remains confined within their own space, some carry suitcases, others’ gaze looms over the big top. Every gesture reflects the emotional heaviness and psychological barriers imposed by our world. The figures seem unable to escape or engage with a reality beyond their own, a world that exists within the fragile yet resilient walls of the circus tent.
Beyond their colorful attire, the circus troupe imagined by Izoli reveals deeper emotions: manipulation, sorrow and anxiety juggle between the characters’ hands. Distraught feelings resurface and the figures cease to represent joy or entertainment. Instead, they juggle life’s weight together with their daily struggles. Balance is key to this new take on Izoli’s distinctive use of collage-style painting. It emerges through the interplay between the vibrancy and coolness of his colour palette, the joy and sorrow expressed through his chosen characters and the tension between manipulation and the direct figurative clarity of his themes.
The roundness present in their bodies does not reflect an idealised physiology, but rather the emotional and psychological weight borne by these characters. A symbol of the quiet toll exacted by prolonged conflict and persistent worry in a world imposed upon us. It is this gravity that tethers them, making it difficult to envision an end to their actions as they juggle, balance and navigate day-to-day realities that offer little to no means of escape.
This series marks a new direction in Izoli’s practice, yet remains rooted in the influence of those who came before him. The theme of balance resurfaces through a contemporary reinterpretation of Da Vinci’s Salvator Mundi, now reimagined in the shape-shifting form of a clown. Like a joker card in a game, the two paintings featuring this clown figure act as wildcards, capable of ending this tumultuous spectacle of emotions. Manipulation takes center stage in these works: vibrant colours, playful acts and magical illusions draw the viewer in, only to mask the deeper realities beneath the surface. In this swirling performance, joy and despair are intertwined, both performed and concealed at once.
Press release from Ayyam Gallery
Image: Elias Izoli. Untitled. 2024. Acrylic and paper collage on canvas. 102 x 123 cm. Image courtesy of the artist and Ayyam Gallery