carlier | gebauer is pleased to announce White on Black, a solo exhibition by the Serbian artist Jelena Bulajić. This will be the artist’s third exhibition with the gallery and her first solo presentation in Madrid.
Jelena Bulajić’s intricate paintings derive from meticulous studies of tactility and surface. More than their subjects, she is attracted to the actual textures of her source materials and the stories that they tell—their cracks, lines, irregularities, relative smoothness or roughness, and tactility—which she brings into a productive friction with the materiality of painting. In White on Black, which inverts a popular expression delineating clarity and unambiguousness, Bulajić lingers on surfaces that confound, mislead, and surprise to, in the artist’s words, “make a fiction of a fiction appear.”
The notion of color has cofounded philosophers for centuries because of the serious metaphysical issues that it raises. Does it exist independent of our minds? How do we actually experience color? David Hume notes that “Sounds, colors, heat and cold, according to modern philosophy, are not qualities in objects, but perceptions in the mind.” The contemporary color historian Victoria Finlay similarly argues that the best way that she’s found to understand color “is to think not so much of something ‘being’ a color but of it ‘doing’ a color.” In a new series of monochromatic paintings, Bulajić “does” color, building up dozens of layers of black and white gloss varnish on transparent plexiglass until brilliant shades of blue appear. These optical illusions absorb and reflect their surroundings, including a series of paintings inspired by Hiroshi Sugimoto’s Diorama photographs, which depict scenes from New York’s Museum of Natural History in a startlingly lifelike manner. Converted into a negative view, Bulajić’s painterly inversions amplify both the artifice and eeriness of the original images, while highlighting the physicality of paint—both the artist’s own painting and the materials used to construct the elements of the diorama displays. “These Sugimoto works have a surface,” Bulajić says, “if you zoom in on the polar bear you can see how the paint cracked while it dried. […] There are little holes all around the animals in the Gamsbok.” If the diorama is historically considered a precursor to photography, then Bulajić’s meditations on this form in White on Black offer a profound reflection on the construction of images, the layers of fiction inherent in reproduction, and the refraction of influence.
Installation Views
Selected Works

Jelena Bulajić
After Sugimoto, Alaskan Wolves, 2024
from the series After Sugimoto
Acrylic, coloured pencil, graphite on linen canvas, 32.4 × 58.2 cm
38,5 × 58,6 cm

Jelena Bulajić
After Sugimoto, Hyena-Jackal-Vulture, 2024
from the series After Sugimoto
Acrylic, black pencil, graphite on linen canvas
41,9 × 54,3 cm

Jelena Bulajić
After Sugimoto, Gemsbok, 2023
from the series After Sugimoto
Acrylic, coloured pencil, graphite on linen canvas
42,1 × 54,4 cm

Jelena Bulajić
Untitled (after Luiza Simons), 2020
watercolour and black pencil on paper
61 × 40,2 cm

Jelena Bulajić
White on Black 1-2 (1), 2024
from the series White on Black
Acrylic on plexiglass, gloss varnish
22 × 14 cm

Jelena Bulajić
Untitled (after Mapplethorpe II), 2020
Watercolour and black pencil on paper
61 × 40,2 cm