... with Hugo Ruyant on Comics and the Art of Leaving Things Unfinished
In this live episode of WAS MIT KUNST, recorded in front of an audience at KÖNIG GALERIE, Johann König speaks with French painter Hugo Ruyant about painting as a conversation, the influence of comics, and how images generate meaning beyond what they directly depict. The full conversation is also available as a video on Spotify and YouTube [https://www.youtube.com/@koeniggalerie].
Drawing was Ruyant’s first creative language. As a child, he imagined becoming a comic book artist before discovering illustration, printmaking, and eventually painting. He describes printmaking as a formative school of seeing—one that taught him to deconstruct images, understand their histories, and reflect on how we consume visual culture.
The conversation takes place on the occasion of his exhibition LEAVE A MESS AGE at KÖNIG GALERIE. The title plays on the phrase “leave a message” while evoking a world that feels increasingly fragmented, accelerated, and uncertain. Throughout the exhibition, birds, parrots, and seashells appear as recurring protagonists. For Ruyant, birds embody rumors, conversations, and the constant transformation of meaning, while seashells become silent listeners—beautiful, seductive forms that hover between abstraction and bodily presence.
Together, Johann König and Ruyant discuss rhythm, repetition, and improvisation in painting. Ruyant speaks about his Alka-Seltzer glass paintings as a visual diary, his shell paintings as exercises in color and surface, and his preference for allowing works to remain slightly open-ended. A painting is finished, he says, when it still leaves room for movement beyond its edges.
The conversation also returns to Ruyant’s enduring fascination with comics, particularly the invisible space between two images where viewers complete the story themselves. It is a principle he carries into his exhibitions, where individual paintings function like fragments of a larger narrative.
A conversation about painting as an open field between figuration and abstraction, humor and melancholy, image and imagination—and about why a painting can be much more than a representation: it can be an emotional object.
More about the ARTIST [https://www.koeniggalerie.com/collections/hugo-ruyant]
More about the EXHIBITION [https://www.koeniggalerie.com/blogs/exhibitions/hugo-ruyant-leave-a-mess-age]
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If you have any questions or comments, please feel free to contact us by email at: info@koeniggalerie.com [info@koeniggalerie.com]
Photo © Hugo Ruyant
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