Ákos Bánki - Apollo Gallery

BÁNKI Ákos

1982, Kazincbarcika, HU

Ákos Bánki’s painting is grounded in a rigorous exploration and radical rethinking of abstraction. His works aim to completely eliminate form and narrative: the image does not depict or illustrate, but functions through the complex interplay of paint, gesture, and color. For Bánki, painting is not a representational medium but an experimental field where inner mental and emotional processes take on material form.

His working method is based on a principle of organized spontaneity. His relationship to the canvas is both physical and reflective. He uses a wide range of tools—brushes, spatulas, sponges, spray guns—and sometimes creates his own instruments to establish a more immediate connection with the material. The behavior of paint, the tension between chance and control, and the emotional mechanisms of color all play crucial roles in his creative process.

On his surfaces, transparent and opaque layers alternate; colors clash, dissolve, and pulse. The canvas operates as a mental landscape where gesture is not an illustration but an organizing principle in itself. His compositions are not built according to predetermined structures but emerge from an intuitive yet consciously guided rhythm, responding to both the physical properties of the material and the inner impulses arising during the process.