30/09/20

Henry Shum @ Empty Gallery, Hong Kong - Vortices

Henry Shum: Vortices
Empty Gallery, Hong Kong
September 26 - November 21, 2020

Empty Gallery presents Vortices, their first solo exhibition with Hong Kong-based painter Henry Shum. Drawing its title from an anachronistic term for ‘vortex’ once employed by William Blake and Descartes to describe the spiral-like structure of the cosmos, Vortices assembles a thematically interconnected group of recent oil paintings along with a single wall mural. Henry Shum locates his source materials within the tides of mediated imagery which daily engulf our consciousness, transmuting these eclectic images into paintings which seem to pulse with an oneiric energy. Rendered in undulating lines and diaphanous washes, these haunting compositions (whose fugitive motifs are mirrored and inverted across the show) depict otherworldly scenes which are at once distant and familiar – tenebrous spaces of late-capitalist dream.

Recurring throughout the paintings on view, the titular vortice can serve as a kind of conceptual interstice through which we can begin to think Henry Shum’s artistic practice. Often mythologized as a site of peril and instability — a kind of zone of negative chance — the figure of the whirlpool has deep roots in the Western psyche, appearing everywhere from Homer to Pound. Defined most simply as a meeting of opposing currents; a spontaneous configuration of swirling fluids around an absent center, it is an elemental structure that has much in common with the self. A spiralling tide which deliriously circulates all manner of cultural debris within its churning orbits, it is destructive and generative in equal measure. For Henry Shum, to paint is first to accept this essential loss of agency, to relinquish a certain intentionality and tenuously circumnavigate this centrifuge of potential images which furnishes the degree zero of a composition.

The works in Vortices harbor deep traces of this aleatoric process, not only on the level of composition or content, but also in their more painterly formal characteristics. One of Henry Shum’s most recent paintings, Annunciation (2020), depicts an enormous tree framed within a pseudo-classical archway, its curving trunk and branches bisecting the composition. Clusters of robed figures emerge from the base and sides of this tree, the folds of their drapery rendered in expressively swirling brushstrokes which seem to echo the gnarled form of the wood itself. These contours pulse with a sense of implied movement, an extra-representational vibration which is mirrored elsewhere in works such as Spirit of An Eye (2020) and New Sun (2020). Reaching beyond the mere fusion of subject and landscape depicted in so much romantic painting, this sense of movement seems rather to hint at the defiant agency of pigment and oils; those liquid intelligences which are so often at odds with the intended mastery of the painter’s hand. Henry Shum frequently uses dilute washes to delineate large areas of his canvases. In paintings such as Revolution of Night (2020), they steep, drip, and pool on the surface of the work (always conversant with the canvas as material) creating subtly irregular forms which feel liminal and vaporous — abstract dispersions of color which only accidentally happen to resolve into the contour of a cloud or the texture of tree-bark. It is as if these painted marks could detach themselves and circumnavigate the space of the canvas, or regain their former liquidity and flow off their material supports entirely. Material can never be completely reduced to image, movement never completely resolved into fixity and stillness. A stretched canvas is merely a threshold, a dark reservoir in which the vitalized fluids of representation lie temporarily suspended.

This sense of internal movement, of emergent multiplicities latent within a single work is one of the most distinctive characteristics of Henry Shum’s practice. If there is often something in one of his paintings which feels unresolved, a symbol or gesture which seems tenuous or peripatetic in relation to the whole, we can perhaps understand this as a sort of constitutional openness — one which implies a different relation to selfhood and artistic agency. This openness takes Henry Shum beyond the hermetic vistas of much contemporary neo-symbolist and neo-romantic painting currently in ascendance. In contrast, his works depict not the reactionary space of personal desire, but rather a formless eddy of pan-subjective merging in which memory and image, history and simulation, and finally, individuality and collectivity collapse into one another. Nowhere is this vision of things clearer than in the titular Vortices (2020), which depicts an anonymous group of silhouettes, gathered together underneath the looming form of a floating balloon. Reusing compositional motifs from earlier paintings, these forms are rendered in outline only; porous and transparent bodies vacated save for the substance of twin whirlpools, whose swirling currents merge into cloudy night sky. In Henry Shum’s aesthetic cosmos, brick facades, frescoes, and classical arches simultaneously recall both the faux-euro ornamentation of Hong Kong housing estates and the Renaissance grandeur of Titian, mysterious robed figures are at once Buddhist arhats and Christian saints, the star-filled evening sky alludes not only to art history but to the self-conscious filtering and aestheticizing of experience; its reduction to image. The figures in Shum’s compositions offer a clue to this condition: with their downcast eyes and languid postures, they suggest nothing so much as the somnambulist. However, this is no longer the exalted state favored by the artists of earlier eras as a means of “transcending the everyday”, but rather the waking sleep of our ceaselessly mediated present.

HENRY SHUM (B. 1998, Hong Kong) received his BA in Fine Art from Chelsea College of Arts London in 2020. Selected group exhibitions include presentations at Candid Arts Trust Gallery (2020), Fitzrovia Gallery (2019), and Bones and Pearl Gallery (2018), in London. Henry Shum currently lives and works in Hong Kong.

EMPTY GALLERY
18th & 19th Floor, Grand Marine Center
3 Yue Fung Street, Tin Wan, Hong Kong
_____________



27/09/20

Fred Boissonnas @ Musée Rath, Genève - Fred Boissonnas et la Méditerranée. Une odyssée photographique

Fred Boissonnas et la Méditerranée
Une odyssée photographique 
Musée Rath, Genève
25 septembre 2020 - 31 janvier 2021

Fred Boissonnas

Fred Boissonnas et la Méditerranée.
Une odyssée photographique 
Musée Rath, Genève

Avec cette nouvelle exposition consacrée à Fred Boissonnas (1858-1946), le Musée d’art et d’histoire, la Bibliothèque de Genève et l’Université de Genève s’associent pour révéler une oeuvre exceptionnelle, une démarche artistique profondément originale ainsi qu’une personnalité attachante de l’histoire genevoise. A travers une sélection d’images provenant du fonds acquis par la Ville de Genève en 2011 et enrichie par les prêts d’autres institutions et de collectionneurs privés, Une odyssée photographique met en valeur un pan à la fois méconnu et crucial de la carrière du photographe : ses voyages en Méditerranée, de la Grèce à Gibraltar, de l’Italie à l'Egypte. 

En 1984, grâce à l’exposition de Nicolas Bouvier Les Boissonnas. Une dynastie de photographes, les visiteurs du Musée Rath découvraient l’histoire d’Henri-Antoine Boissonnas et de ses descendants qui firent des années 1860 aux années 1980 le choix de « vivre par et pour la photographie ». Trente-six ans plus tard, toujours au Musée Rath, Une odyssée photographique rend hommage au représentant le plus fécond de cette dynastie, Fred Boissonnas, qui reprend l’atelier genevois de son père Henri-Antoine en 1887 avant de connaître un succès international.

Inspiré par le mouvement pictorialiste dont il est l’un des principaux représentants en Europe dans les années 1890, Fred Boissonnas explore bientôt d’autres voies pour faire reconnaître la photographie comme un art à part entière. Cette nouvelle exposition montre combien ses voyages en Méditerranée ont été le moteur de cette quête, lui permettant de créer une oeuvre profondément originale. Héritières du romantisme, ses images constituent une contribution essentielle à la nouvelle vision du monde apportée par la photographie au 20e siècle. 

En cheminant à travers les paysages et en collaborant avec des hommes de lettres, des archéologues et des hommes politiques, Fred Boissonnas interprète la géographie et l’histoire du monde par la photographie. Sur les pas d’Ulysse avec Victor Bérard, sur les traces de saint Augustin en Afrique du Nord ou de l’Ancien Testament dans le Sinaï, ses projets jouent avec la souplesse des interprétations que la photographie suscite. Ils repoussent aussi les limites de son cadre, de son immobilité et de son silence, de son rapport au temps, indissolublement liée à l’instant, et de son lien indéfectible au réel. Les visiteurs sont ainsi conviés à un voyage dans le temps, dans l’espace et à la surface de l’image. 

Prêteurs : Musée de l’Elysée, Lausanne ; Musée de l’appareil photographique, Vevey ; Musée Benaki, Athènes ; Collection Christophe et Viviane Blatt ; Collection Nicolas Crispini ; Collection D. Martinez ; Collection Jean-Marc Martin du Theil ; Fondation Roussen ; Collection privée Borel-Boissonnas, Suisse ; Collection privée, Suisse

Publication : Estelle Sohier, Fred Boissonnas et la Méditerranée. Une odyssée photographique, Éditions de La Martinière, Paris, 2020, 189 p.

Commissariat de l’exposition :
Estelle Sohier (maître d’enseignement et de recherche, Université de Genève), commissaire
Lada Umstätter (conservatrice en chef Beaux-Arts, Musée d’art et d’histoire), commissaire
Mayte Garcia (assistante conservatrice Beaux-Arts, Musée d’art et d’histoire), co-commissaire
Nicolas Schätti (conservateur, Bibliothèque de Genève), co-commissaire 

MUSÉE RATH
Place Neuve – 1204 Genève

26/09/20

Cindy Sherman @ Metro Pictures, NYC

Cindy Sherman
Metro Pictures, New York
September 26 – October 31, 2020

For her latest body of work, Cindy Sherman has transformed herself into an extraordinary cast of androgynous characters, expanding her career-long investigation into the construction of identity and the nature of representation. The enigmatic figures pictured in the ten new photographs on view are dressed primarily in men’s designer clothing and are posed gallantly in front of digitally manipulated backgrounds composed from photographs Cindy Sherman took while traveling through Bavaria, Shanghai, and Sissinghurst (England). Each character draws the viewer in with their unique style, immediate eye contact and steely gaze.

Renowned for her depictions of female stereotypes, Cindy Sherman has played with masculinity and gender expression before. In a series referred to as "Doctor and Nurse,” Cindy Sherman became both a male and female character, embodying stereotypical mid-century professional archetypes. In the “History Portrait” series, Cindy Sherman became both male aristocrats and clergymen. In her more recent clown series, the artist donned layers of face paint and shapeless costumes, eliminating the question of gender for many of the characters.

One of the most influential artists of her generation, Cindy Sherman will be the subject of a one-person exhibition at the Fondation Louis Vuitton in Paris that runs from September 23 through January 3, 2021, following major retrospective exhibitions in 2019 at the National Portrait Gallery, London, and the Vancouver Art Gallery. Her 2012 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art, New York, traveled to the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; and the Dallas Museum of Art. Additional recent exhibitions include Fosun Foundation, Shanghai; the inaugural exhibition at the Broad Museum, Los Angeles; Queensland Art Gallery | Gallery of Modern Art, Brisbane, Australia; and Astrup Fearnley Museum, Oslo. Sherman has participated in four Venice Biennales, co-curating a section at the 55th exhibition in 2013. Her work has been included in five iterations of the Whitney Biennial, two Biennales of Sydney, and the 1983 Documenta. She is the recipient of the 2020 Wolf Prize in Arts and has also been awarded the Praemium Imperiale, an American Academy of Arts and Letters Award, and a MacArthur Foundation Fellowship.

METRO PICTURES
519 West 24th Street, New York, NY 10011

25/09/20

Jean Claracq @ Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris - Open Space #7

Jean Claracq - Open Space #7
Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris
23 septembre 2020 - 3 janvier 2021

Jean Claracq
JEAN CLARACQ
Propaganda, L'ouïe, 2020
Huile sur bois, 12,1 x 6 cm 
© Jean Claracq

JEAN CLARACQ entretient depuis l’enfance une fascination pour l’histoire de l’art dans laquelle il continue de puiser son inspiration de l’enluminure médiévale à la photographie en passant par la peinture de la Renaissance. 
 
Privilégiant le format miniature, ses peintures procèdent d’un collage numérique dans lequel se mêlent des sources variées. Malgré les limites imposées par le format, ses œuvres foisonnent d’une multitude de détails et offrent des récits multiples où se croisent différentes temporalités et espaces selon une iconographie très contemporaine.  
 
Inspiré par la tradition des scènes de genre, Jean Claracq met en scène des personnages masculins, jeunes, absorbés dans des mondes virtuels, isolés dans des espaces intérieurs ou extérieurs offrant différents points de vue sur la ville périphérique et ses bâtiments mais aussi sur le paysage urbain ou naturel. 

A l’occasion de sa première exposition personnelle, il conçoit Propaganda cinq œuvres inédites enchâssées dans un dispositif de maquette architecturale conviant le visiteur à tourner autour des peintures. 
 
JEAN CLARACQ vit et travaille à Paris. Diplômé de l’Ecole Nationale Supérieur des Beaux-Arts de Paris en 2017, en 2018 il reçoit le 2eme prix Antoine Marin et le Prix de peinture Roger Bataille. Ses récentes expositions collectives incluent : « Umbilicus », Sultana, Paris (2019), "Les fleurs de l’été sont les rêves de l’hiver racontés le matin à la table des anges", Praz-Delavallade, Paris (2019), « Mais pas du tout, c’est platement figuratif ! Toi tu es spirituelle mon amour ! », Jousse Entreprise, Paris (2019) et Artagon IV, Heading East, Magasins Généraux, Paris (2018).
 
Les commissaires de l'exposition : 
Ludovic Delalande et Claire Staebler

FONDATION LOUIS VUITTON
8 Avenue du Mahatma Gandhi, Bois de Boulogne, 75116 Paris

Updated 15.10.2021

22/09/20

Cindy Sherman à la Fondation Louis Vuitton - Une rétrospective (de 1975 à 2020) + Crossing Views : La Collection, regards sur un nouveau choix d’œuvres

Cindy Sherman à la Fondation Louis Vuitton
Une rétrospective (de 1975 à 2020)
Crossing Views : La Collection, regards sur un nouveau choix d’œuvres
Fondation Louis Vuitton, Paris
23 septembre 2020 - 3 janvier 2021

Premier événement consacré en France à Cindy Sherman depuis l’exposition du Jeu de Paume de 2006, « Cindy Sherman à la Fondation Louis Vuitton » réunit, d’une part, une rétrospective composée de quelque 170 œuvres de l’artiste et, d’autre part, l’exposition Crossing Views, un choix de quelque cinquante œuvres de la Collection, d’une vingtaine d’artistes français et internationaux, arrêté avec Cindy Sherman.

I. Une rétrospective (de 1975 à 2020)

Tout au long de sa carrière, Cindy Sherman a bouleversé la notion de portrait en développant une œuvre à la frontière de la réalité et de la fiction. Au fil de ses séries, elle n’a cessé de produire des images aussi saisissantes que complexes qui se jouent des stéréotypes allant de la déconstruction des archétypes féminins à des interrogations d’une profonde actualité sur la fluidité des genres. Cette exposition rétrospective se déploie dans trois galeries (1, 2 et 4) sur deux niveaux du bâtiment de la Fondation. Les 170 œuvres réunies ici et articulées en dix-huit séries, offrent un panorama de sa pratique artistique de 1975 à aujourd’hui, allant des premières œuvres de jeunesse à ses productions les plus récentes, dont certaines sont inédites. À cette occasion, un important corpus de 60 œuvres appartenant à la Collection de la Fondation est présenté.

II. Crossing views : La Collection, regards sur un nouveau choix d’œuvres

Résultant d’un regard croisé sur la Collection, ce nouvel accrochage, intitulé Crossing Views (galeries 5 à 11) propose un choix de 50 œuvres issues de la Collection de la Fondation, arrêté avec Cindy Sherman. À travers des approches et des supports différents (peinture, sculpture, photographie, vidéo, installation), il rassemble quelque vingt artistes français et internationaux, autour de l’idée fédératrice du portrait avec un ensemble d’œuvres des années 1960 à nos jours. Le portrait est ainsi conçu comme un espace permettant d’interroger les archétypes féminins et masculins, l’enfance et l’adolescence, la mémoire intime et collective, la fiction et l’allégorie, l’identité sociale et le renouveau formel du genre via les nouveaux médias et les réseaux sociaux.

Artistes exposés :

Adel Abdessemed (1971, Algérie/France), Marina Abramović (1946, Serbie), Ziad Antar (1978, Liban), Dara Birnbaum (1946, États-Unis), Christian Boltanski (1944, France), Louise Bourgeois (1911-2010, États-Unis), Clément Cogitore (1983, France), Rineke Dijkstra (1959, Pays-Bas), Samuel Fosso (1962, Cameroun), Gilbert & George (1942, Royaume-Uni), Damien Hirst (1965, Royaume-Uni),  Annette Messager (1943, France), Zanele Muholi (1972, Afrique du Sud), Albert Oehlen (1954, Allemagne), Rob Pruitt (1964, États-Unis), Torbjørn Rødland (1970, Norvège), Wilhelm Sasnal (1977, Pologne), Cindy Sherman (1954, États-Unis), Wolfgang Tillmans (1968, Allemagne), Rosemarie Trockel (1952, Allemagne), Andy Warhol (1928-1987, États-Unis), Ming Wong (1971, Singapour).

• Cindy Sherman est présente à deux reprises dans Crossing Views, en galerie 5, non loin des archives de Christian Boltanski et en galerie 9, où ses tapisseries récentes (2019) sont montrées en résonance avec The Evil Eye (2017-2018) de Clément Cogitore.

• La continuité entre les deux séquences de cet événement est assurée par des paysages tirés des murals (2010) de Cindy Sherman qui sont exposés sur les murs extérieurs des trois niveaux de la Fondation.

• À l’écart, tirant partie de la spécificité acoustique de la galerie 10 (dite « La Cathédrale ») et de son accès indépendant, L’Expédition scintillante (Acte II) (2002) de Pierre Huyghe, œuvre hypnotique et contemplative, est présentée pour la première fois à la Fondation.

Commissariat général : Suzanne Pagé, Directrice artistique

Commissaires : 

Une rétrospective (de 1975 à 2020)
Marie-Laure Bernadac et Olivier Michelon, Conservateur
avec Ludovic Delalande, Commissaire d’exposition associé

Crossing Views : La Collection, regards sur un nouveau choix d’œuvres
Angeline Scherf, Conservatrice, Nathalie Ogé, Chargée de recherche pour la Collection, Ludovic Delalande
assistés de Claudia Buizza

FONDATION LOUIS VUITTON
8 avenue du Mahatma Gandhi, Boisde Boulogne, 75016 Paris

21/09/20

Halle 38 - Années tropiques @ Dijon - Musée des Beaux-arts & Les Bains du Nord - FRAC Bourgogne, Dijon

Halle 38 - Années tropiques
avec des œuvres d'Atsing, Diane Audema, Diane Blondeau, Hugo Capron, Julien Chateau, Ramya Chuon, Cécile Maulini, Hugo Pernet, Nicolas Rouah 
Musée des Beaux-arts de Dijon
17 septembre 2020 - 4 janvier 2021
Les Bains du Nord - FRAC Bourgogne, Dijon
17 septembre 2020 - 3 janvier 2021

Halle 38 - Années tropiques
Halle 38 - Années tropiques
Conception de l'identité visuelle : Atelier Anette Lenz

Cette exposition se tient simultanément aux Bains du Nord - FRAC Bourgogne et au musée des Beaux-arts de Dijon.

Inaugurés en 2017 dans une ancienne halle militaire, les ateliers d'artistes installés dans la Halle 38 ont pour objet et vocation d'accueillir et de soutenir la jeune création contemporaine active à Dijon. Depuis plusieurs années, la Ville de Dijon a mis en œuvre une politique d'accueil et de soutien à la nouvelle génération d'artistes contemporains.

Ainsi sept ateliers accueillent des artistes en résidence pour une durée de un ou deux ans. La première promotion compte neuf artistes de Bourgogne Franche-Comté : ATSING, Diane AUDEMA, Diane BLONDEAU, Hugo CAPRON, Julien CHATEAU et Ramya CHUON (collectif du Petit Laboratoire des Formes Potentielles), Cécile MAULINI, Hugo PERNET et Nicolas ROUAH.

La Halle 38 est un lieu où les imaginations se croisent et s'entrechoquent et où les inspirations et les aspirations se nourrissent mutuellement. Ce moment dans la vie de ces artistes leur offre l'occasion de travailler dans un cadre serein et de se concentrer sur leur travail, balayant les contingences pratiques et quotidiennes. Temps de réflexion, d'expérimentation et finalement de création, c'est aussi l'opportunité de goûter à la vie en commun.

L’exposition « Halle 38 - Années tropiques » montre le travail des artistes installés à la Halle 38 de 2017 à 2019, dans deux lieux emblématiques de la vie artistique dijonnaise : d’une part, Les Bains du Nord, espace d'exposition permanent du Fonds régional d'art contemporain de Bourgogne, et de l’autre, le musée des Beaux-arts de Dijon, récemment rénové.

Pensée comme une exposition en deux lieux, « Halle 38 - Années tropiques » propose de découvrir le travail de ces artistes. A l’instar du phénomène de la périodicité des quatre saisons que les astronomes nomment « année tropique », leurs productions et l’évolution de leur travail ont rythmé la vie de la Halle 38 et de Dijon.

Présentation des artistes exposés 
aux Bains du Nord 
et au musée des Beaux-arts de Dijon

Atsing (Heqing Xue)
Né en 1958 à Shanghai, Atsing vit et travaille à Dijon.
Atsing pratique un art du portrait tout à la fois contemporain et intemporel. Saisis sur le vif, ses sujets semblent absents, distants, absorbés par une activité ou une pensée qui les soustraient au regard du spectateur. Si le peintre réussit à capturer un instant précis sur la toile, ce moment semble tout aussi bien suspendu pour l’éternité. A l'instar du voyageur qui attend son métro ou bien de l'homme assis sur sa chaise, les personnes représentées dérobent leur regard au nôtre ou demeurent des visages anonymes parmi d'autres. La palette sourde et subtile où prédominent les tons gris confère aux œuvres une qualité mélancolique, où la représentation sans fard du spleen de la vie quotidienne et de ses actions, atteint une forme de sublime sous les traits délicats de pinceau de l’artiste.

Diane Audema
Née en 1983, Diane Audema vit et travaille à Dijon.
Chacune de ses sculptures, installations ou photographies, résulte d'une recherche empirique se jouant du temps au hasard des rencontres. La dérive comme processus de recherche amène son travail à naviguer entre restitution documentaire et reconstitution d'un environnement, d'un lieu, d'un paysage. L'esthétique du débris est centrale dans sa pratique comme une extension formelle de (dé)construction. S'inspirant des techniques de construction alternative, elle réalise des sculptures, des objets, à partir de ce dont elle dispose dans une apparente économie de moyen. Elle dialogue avec le bâti, en prélevant des fragments d'histoires et de lieux pour en révéler un état d’intemporalité, et créer des espaces fictionnels. Aussi bien dans ses sculptures que dans ses photographies, le simple tube fluorescent, les éléments d'architectures ou les minéraux rappellent cette ambiguïté entre poésie et brutalisme. Ses photographies prises sur le vif, évocatrices de souvenirs, de situations ou d'états, proposent un arrêt sur image, un arrêt dans le temps.

Diane Blondeau
Née en 1987, Diane Blondeau vit et travaille à Dijon.
Artiste plasticienne sonore, sa pratique est celle du field recording et de l’installation. Son travail phonographique se concentre autour de l’oralité et d'environnements sonores. Elle crée des récits où les images et les paysages sont produits par notre mémoire acoustique. Les membranes de ses microphones enregistrent des dérives, des mots, des histoires, des légendes, des résonances, des hésitations, des interrogations, des traductions, des chants, des suspensions, des environnements et des silences …. Dans ses installations, elle cherche à redéfinir des modes de perceptions par tous les facteurs liés à l’écoute. Elle travaille à partir de sons du réel ou générés qui sont alors filtrés et sculptés dans l’espace d’exposition. Elle tente ainsi de révéler le caractère acoustique de chaque espace. Entre visible et invisible, audible et inaudible Diane Blondeau crée des leurres, amplifie ce qui nous entoure ou au contraire, l'occulte totalement.

Hugo Capron
Né en 1989, Hugo Capron vit et travaille à Dijon
Ses dernières peintures témoignent de son désir constant de réinvention et de l’évolution récente de ses recherches. Elles s’écartent en effet de ses travaux précédents pour développer une nouvelle grammaire formelle. Après son départ de la Halle 38, Hugo Capron a passé plusieurs mois à la Villa Kujoyama à Kyoto, ce temps de résidence l’a conduit vers un travail sur le motif évocateur d’un tout nouveau japonisme. Ses peintures sur de grands formats, comme sur de plus petits, présentent une surface et une composition saturées par les formes et les couleurs, loin des aplats monochromes et des jeux sur le vide et le plein de ses œuvres antérieures. Ce nouveau lexique permet à l'artiste des variations presque infinies de possibilités sur toile et également sur papier.

Julien Chateau
Né en 1976, Julien Chateau vit à Talant et travaille à Dijon
La pratique protéiforme de Julien Chateau se situe à l’interface entre dessin, sculpture, photographie et vidéo. Traversant la diversité des mediums, ses œuvres sont sous-tendues par un principe unique, « l'acte générateur » qui vise à « donner vie » à des objets ou à des images. Son travail photographique dévoile des paysages énigmatiques et oniriques dont les contrastes marqués, les couleurs saturées ou fluorescentes et les éléments représentés produisent un écart vis-àvis du réel et invitent le spectateur à entreprendre un voyage mental, où il peut librement transposer dans cet espace ses propres mondes intérieurs. On retrouve la qualité poétique des œuvres dans des titres, tels que Paysage cristalloïde mourant, qui évoque tout autant la mélancolie de la scène finale, que les opérations chimiques mises en œuvre par l’artiste pour faire naître ces formes hybrides, à la fois organiques, minérales et artificielles.

Ramya Chuon
Né en 1975, Ramya Chuon vit et travaille à Dijon.
La peinture et la sculpture sont les deux principaux médiums au travers desquels s’exprime Ramya Chuon, mais la sculpture est la forme préférée de ses recherches plastiques. Elle est le moyen d'une quête des origines. Notre environnement est en perpétuelle mutation. Notre vie n'est que le témoignage d'un acte créatif qui se développe lentement, secrètement, avant de se manifester au grand jour. Sa sculpture sur le thème de la morphogénèse, met à jour la complexité de notre être, composé de multiples strates et facettes : les différents matériaux, changeants, les structures et rythmes combinatoires, modulables, évolutifs, empêchent toute vision globale et donc réductrice de l'œuvre. Ce qui se voit cache aussi ce qui était, ce qui est, ce qui sera peut-être. Sa production est en état de métamorphose constante, à l'instar de tout ce qui nous entoure. Au centre de l’œuvre, un cœur dissimulé. De nombreux dessins préparatoires étayent le travail de l'artiste et complètent sa démarche.

Cécile Maulini
Née en 1977, Cécile Maulini vit et travaille à Dijon.
Cécile Maulini est une artiste aux multiples facettes. Grande collectionneuse d'objets et d'images, ses œuvres conjuguent plusieurs univers où se mêlent et fusionnent des motifs familiers. Elle ravive des images de différentes époques et des objets aux différentes vies, abandonnés faute d'être toujours usités. Ils renaissent dans l'atelier de l'artiste ; certains sont réactivés quand d'autres attendent leur tour. De ces motifs superposés dans un espace aux différentes temporalités va naître une esthétique emprunte de féminisme où jaillissent les images latentes de notre imaginaire. Cécile Maulini donne naissance à un univers fantastique, familier, mais énigmatique où la solitude se mêle à la douceur. Les œuvres de l'artiste, collages, peintures ou sculptures, activent la mémoire et invitent à la réflexion.

Hugo Pernet
Né en 1983, Hugo Pernet vit et travaille à Dijon.
Depuis quelques années, Hugo Pernet a délaissé la peinture géométrique conceptuelle pour se rapprocher d'une pratique plus figurative. Les œuvres qui en résultent frappent le spectateur par leur apparente simplicité et leur frontalité décomplexée. Le vocabulaire formel qui émerge des séries de peintures semble se délester de tout superflu, pour se concentrer uniquement sur le dialogue entre ligne et couleur. Rien ne vient alors entraver la lisibilité de l’œuvre, ni son immédiateté. En découle un pouvoir d'évocation quasiment synesthésique : à la vue d'une cerise ou d'une pêche, on peut presque sentir son odeur et son goût sur ses lèvres.

Nicolas Rouah
Né en 1974, Nicolas Rouah vit et travaille à Rennes.
Les tableaux de Nicolas Rouah projettent le spectateur dans un espace sidéral hybride, à mi chemin entre la science et le fantasme. Car si les constellations et poussières d'étoiles ainsi représentées évoquent inéluctablement les images scientifiques prises de l'espace, elles proviennent en réalité de l'imaginaire de l'artiste et de sa volonté de stimuler le regard et de le faire voyager. Traversant la toile telle la foudre, le néon fluorescent vient briser l'harmonie un peu trop lisse de la composition et la rattache au codes du numérique et aux images ultra-colorées de la pop culture contemporaine dont le graphisme percutant et la palette tranchante jouent avec l'idée de bling-bling et de mauvais goût. Se délestant de l'éternel débat entre peinture abstraite et peinture figurative, Nicolas Rouah offre à la place au spectateur : « un espace ultime, un ailleurs absolu à l'échappatoire impossible. »

Commissariat Musée des Beaux-arts : Jessica Watson, responsable des collections XXe et XXIe au musée des Beaux-arts de Dijon.

Commissariat Bains du Nord - FRAC Bourgogne : Astrid Handa-Gagnard, directrice du FRAC Bourgogne

MUSÉE DES BEAUX-ARTS DE DIJON
Palais des ducs et des États de Bourgogne
Place de la Sainte-Chapelle, 21000 Dijon

BAINS DU NORD - FRAC BOURGOGNE
16 rue Quentin, 21000 Dijon

20/09/20

Marcy Rosenblat @ Jason McCoy Gallery, NYC - Online - Shadow Liners

Marcy Rosenblat: Shadow Liners
Jason McCoy Gallery, New York - Online
September 18 – October 30, 2020

Marcy Rosenblat

MARCY ROSENBLAT
Three Scutes, One Bangle, 2020
Pigment and silica medium on canvas, 48 x 52 inches
© Marcy Rosenblat, Courtesy of Jason McCoy Gallery, New York

Jason McCoy Gallery presents SHADOW LINERS, an exclusive online exhibition of recent paintings and works on paper by MARCY ROSENBLAT.

While Marcy Rosenblat has worked with figurative narratives in the past, her relationship with abstraction has spanned over 25 years. Even so, her new body of work has employed something quite different. Onto compositions of luminous abstract shapes, she sprays paint through pieces of lace. This creates the illusion of a mysterious fabric veiling parts of the canvas, generating a vivid interplay between background and surface pattern.

Marcy Rosenblat notes: "Focusing on something behind a drape engages a specific thought process. The act of bringing something into view agitates the mind as it tries to grasp the content of what is being revealed. I'm interested in making paintings that agitate the viewing mind in the same way, where in addition to being looked at the paint becomes something the viewer tries to look through."

Despite Marcy Rosenblat’s formal concerns, the patterns she introduces bring about an array of allusions, ranging from curtains, pixels, and tattoos. This provides her work with a perhaps originally unintentional but welcomed subtext. Although historically, the making of lace (unlike embroidery for example) was not considered a gender specific practice, the association of the material with homemaking or with the adornment of fanciful female gowns, certainly was. By liberating lace from any traditional and cultural context and only using small sections of larger fabrics, Marcy Rosenblat guides our focus straight to its intricate, web-like details.

Born in 1952 in Chicago, MARCY ROSENBLAT currently lives and works in Brooklyn. She received her B.F.A. from Kansas City Art Institute and her M.F.A. from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Her work has been exhibited nationally and internationally, including the Rawls Museum Arts, Virginia; Fordham University, New York; Smith College, Northampton, Massachusetts; The Nelson Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City; and Salisbury University, Maryland. Marcy Rosenblat received an artist’s grant from the Women’s Art Development Committee in 1998. She is currently an Adjunct Professor of Fine Arts at The Fashion Institute of Technology.

JASON MCCOY GALLERY
41 East 57th Street, New York, NY 10022

Martin Wehmer @ Contemporary by Angela Li, Hong Kong - Body Fragments

Martin Wehmer: Body Fragments
Contemporary by Angela Li, Hong Kong
24 September - 31 October 2020

Martin Wehmer

MARTIN WEHMER
Women 2, 2019
Oil on Canvas, 170 x 100 cm
© Martin Wehmer, Courtesy Contemporary by Angela Li

Contemporary by Angela Li presents Body Fragments, the fourth Hong Kong solo exhibition of Beijing-based German artist MARTIN WEHMER, in conjunction with the launch of his new book MJB and the first edition of Central West Hong Kong, an art initiative by a collective of galleries in the Central West District. Martin Wehmer has been painting in his signature heavy impasto style for more than three decades, a technique he has mastered through premeditated brush and palette-knife strokes. Highly expressive with painterly gestures whilst stripping down “the unnecessary so that the necessary may speak”, Martin Wehmer adopts an ideology by Hans Hofmann and develops a one-of-a-kind artistic language of his own, while integrating his personal experience of living in China as a foreigner onto his canvases.

Martin Wehmer has been living and working in Beijing as an artist and an art educator since 2008. He has held a number of successful exhibitions in China and around the world, and continued to foster and forge exchange with numerous art communities. His artistic practice, however, have not been directly influenced by Chinese art as the artist grounded himself deeply in the exploration of Abstract Expressionism. Martin Wehmer compares himself to the late German American painter Hans Hofmann who was a pivotal figure in Abstract Expressionism, not from the artistic point-of-view but the similarity in their directions in life. “He was from Germany and later became a teacher, a founder of the New York School and an important artist in America. This direction is very similar to mine because I am also from Germany, I am a teacher and an artist in China. We both transfer our believes and theories from our own country to another. Exchange in ideas can change the world,” Martin Wehmer said. As a foreign artist in China, Martin Wehmer continues to take up the cultural challenge and experience through living and working in Beijing.

Martin Wehmer

MARTIN WEHMER
Yan, 2019 
Oil on Canvas, 45 x 60cm
© Martin Wehmer, Courtesy Contemporary by Angela Li

The exhibition titles, both English and Chinese, are derived from Martin Wehmer’s unique observations of human postures and daily objects from his everyday surroundings or those he comes across on Wechat and the internet. Following on the idea of eliminating the unnecessary, Martin Wehmer visually and carefully dissects ‘Body’ into ‘Fragments’ with his impasto strokes. “For the whopping visibility of Martin Wehmer’s paintings would be entirely misunderstood if you described it as an abandonment of the visible world,” Hans-Joachim Müller commented, an art critic and a contributor of Martin Wehmer’s latest publication MJB. What is being captured seems unintentional, like ‘an uncontrolled photography’ described by Müller that is taken by accident, but the simplification of representation in Martin Wehmer’s works is an intentional effort to remove unnecessary details to achieve a unified form between gesture and representation. Similarly, with the Chinese title <部首>, the idea is taken from the literal meanings of each of the characters as ‘parts and head’ rather than the direct translate of the word as a whole – Chinese radical, a graphical component of a Chinese character. Martin Wehmer’s works are almost sculptural in their application, with every bold palette-knife stroke giving forms to segments of the body, sharing a glimpse of fragments of the artist’s life in China.

This exhibition brings together 12 paintings that fall short of ordinary portraits, from partial feminine figures to closeups of hands, eyes and lips. None of the persons depicted can be identified as unique individuals due to the lack of defined details, but the imageries are still refined enough to go beyond generic representations of the body. Martin Wehmer invites viewers to look at his works with an open mind and heart in order to achieve open interpretations. “There is no contemporary art without open minds and free human beings,” Martin Wehmer said.

MARTIN WEHMER was born in Blankenstein J. Hattingen, Germany in 1966. He was awarded the Volksbanken art prize in Germany in 1996. He later took up art residencies in Edinburgh and Beijing, and finally decided to settle in Beijing in 2008, where he has lived and worked since. He was one of the organizers of the Beijing 798 Biennale in 2009. Martin Wehmer is also a devout art educator. He has been a lecturer at Beijing’s Central Academy of Fine Arts, Tianjin Academy of Fine Arts, and headed the CDK project, a joint programme of the University of the Arts, Berlin and the China Academy of Art, Hangzhou, facilitating art exchange between China and Germany. His works have been exhibited extensively around the world, and have been included in important collections such as UBS (Hong Kong, Cologne, Zürich), Kunstkredit Basel and Kultusministerium Kanton Basel.

CONTEMPORARY BY ANGELA LI
G/F, 248 Hollywood Road, Sheung Wan, Hong Kong

06/09/20

Miroslaw Balka, Marianne Berenhaut, Latifa Echakhch, Gustav Metzger @ Dvir Gallery, Brussels - ‘Lacrimae Rerum’ Homage to Gustav Metzger

‘Lacrimae Rerum’ Homage to Gustav Metzger
Miroslaw Balka, Marianne Berenhaut, Latifa Echakhch, Gustav Metzger
Dvir Gallery, Brussels
September 3 - October 24, 2020

Dvir Gallery presents ‘Lacrimae Rerum’ – homage to Gustav Metzger. The exhibition aims to show a selection of Gustav Metzger’s historical works alongside never seen before pieces by Miroslaw Balka, Marianne Berenhaut and Latifa Echakhch created especially for this exhibition.

Gustav Metzger, born in Nuremberg in 1926, revolutionized the contemporary art world by developing the concept of Auto-Destructive Art and questioning the role of art in the political discourse.
« There is no choice but to follow the path of ethics into aesthetics. »
Gustav Metzger
GUSTAV METZGER

Born to Polish-Jewish parents in Nurnberg, Gustav Metzger was evacuated to Great Britain in 1939 at the age of twelve with the help of the initiative known as the Kindertransport. As a young boy, he became aware of the atrocities of the totalitarian Nazi regime. His parents and other relatives perished in the Holocaust.

In 1959, Gustav Metzger wrote his first manifesto, titled ‘Auto-destructive Art’ and with this became the founding father of a radical new form of art. With this and his later manifestos, he showed how society could be destroyed by capitalism, but also highlighted the transformative potential of destruction; for example, the possibility for transformation of society through individual and collective action. In 1961, Gustav Metzger demonstrated the concept of ADA for the first time by vigorously spraying nylon canvasses with acid, causing them to disintegrate. This was an attack on, and even a symbolic destruction of, the system. At the same time, Gustav Metzger not only rebelled against the political system, but also against the commercial aspects of the art world. In 1977, he proposed a three-year Art Strike, which he hoped would cause a collapse and complete restructuring of the art system.

Gustav Metzger has had solo exhibitions at Serpentine Galleries, London; Tate Britain, London; Museo Jumex, Mexico City; Neuer Berliner Kunstverein, Berlin; Haus der Kunst München, Munich, Kunsthalle Basel, Basel; New Museum, New York; Tel Aviv Museum of Art, Tel Aviv and many others. Moreover, his work was shown at Documenta 13 (2012), the Venice Biennale of 2003 and the Sao Paulo Biennale of 2010.

LATIFA ECHAKHCH

Working in painting, sculpture and installations, Latifa Echakhch (El Khnansa, Morocco, 1974) chooses easily recognisable objects invested with a domestic and/or social burden, which she silences through destruction, deletion or by restoring them. This thereby deprives them of their usage value - pushing their function into oblivion - in order to free the memories attached to them. She summons memories and frees the ghosts that emerge from these objects. The work of Latifa Echakhch is simultaneously conceptual and romantic, both political and poetic.

Latifa Echakhch’s work has been presented in numerous solo exhibitions: at the Museum Haus Konstruktiv in Zurich, the Centre Pompidou in Paris, the macLYON, the Hammer Museum in Los Angeles, the BPS22 in Charleroi, the Columbus Museum of Art (Ohio), the Kunsthaus Zurich, the MACBA in Barcelona, the Nouveau Musée National de Monaco, the FRAC Champagne-Ardenne in Reims, the Kunsthalle Fridericianum in Kassel, the Swiss Institute in New York, the Tate Modern in London, the Memmo Foundation in Rome; as well as group exhibitions: at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Musée d’Art moderne de la Ville de Paris, the Palais de Tokyo in Paris, the MoMA PS1 in New York, the Fundació Joan Miró in Barcelona, the Contemporary Arts Museum in Houston; and as part of the Istanbul Biennial, the 54th Venice Biennale, the 11th Sharjah Biennial, the Jerusalem Art Focus Biennale and the Manifesta 7 in Bolzano.

Latifa Echakhch won the Marcel Duchamp Prize in 2013 and the Zurich Art Prize in 2015. She is representing Switzerland at Venice Biennale 2022.

MIROSLAW BALKA

Miroslaw Balka was born in 1958 in Warsaw, Poland where he lives and works. Comprising installation, sculpture and video, Miroslaw Balka’s work has a bare and elegiac quality that is underlined by the careful, minimalist placement of objects, as well as the gaps and pauses between them. Miroslaw Balka’s work deals with both personal and collective memories, especially as they relate to his Catholic upbringing and the collective experience of Poland’s fractured history. Through this investigation of domestic memories and public catastrophe, he explores how subjective traumas are translated into collective histories and vice versa. His materials are simple, everyday objects and things, but also powerfully resonant of ritual, hidden memories and the history of Nazi occupation in Poland.

Miroslaw Balka has participated in major exhibitions worldwide including: Venice Biennale (1990, 2003, 2005, 2013; representing Poland in 1993), documenta IX, Kassel (1992), Sydney Biennale (1992, 2006), The Carnegie International, Pittsburgh (1995), Sao Paulo Biennale (1998), Liverpool Biennial (1999), Santa Fe Biennale (2006). In 2009 he presented the special project How It Is for the Unilever Series, Turbine Hall, Tate Modern, London. He is the author of the Memorial to the Victims of the Estonia Ferry Disaster in Stockholm (1997), and numerous spatial works including AUSCHWITZWIELICZKA, Cracow (2010), and HEAL, University of California, San Francisco (2009).

Retrospectives of his work took place in such institutions as Pirelli Hangar Bicocca in Milan, Museum of Art in Lodz and in the Museum Morsbroich in Leverkusen. Miroslaw Balka’s works are in numerous institutional collections including: Tate Modern, London; Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven; MOCA, Los Angeles; SFMOMA, San Francisco; MOMA, New York; Hirshhorn Museum, Washington DC; The Art Institute of Chicago; The Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh; Museu Serralves, Porto; Moderna Museet, Stockholm; Kiasma, Helsinki; Kröller-Müller, Otterlo; EMST The National Museum of Art, Athens; The National Museum of Art, Osaka; The Israel Museum, Jerusalem; Tel Aviv Museum of Art; Collection Lambert, Avignon; Middelheimmuseum, Antwerp; Fundación Botín, Santander; Museum of Contemporary Art, Zagreb. In Poland his works are in the collections of: Muzeum Sztuki, Lodz; Centre of Contemporary Art, Warsaw; Zacheta – National Gallery of Art, Warsaw; Museum of Modern Art, Warsaw; The National Museum, Wroclaw; MOCAK, Cracow; Labirynt, Lublin; Arsenał, Bialystok.

MARIANNE BERENHAUT

Marianne Berenhaut, Belgian-born (1934) artist has been gathering, curating, transforming objects found in her immediate surrounding creating powerful yet delicate sculptures and installations. Her work addresses longing, trauma, absence and memory. Through her vast body of work, spanning through 45 years, Marianne Berenhaut has created a unique visual language.

Today, Marianne Berenhaut divides her time between Brussels and London, constantly creating. Having graduated the Académie du Midi and Atelier de Moeschal in the sixties, she had various solo exhibitions in different art spaces and institutions like La Maison des Femmes (Brussels), Island Brussels, Musée juif de Belgique (Brussels), MAC’s Grand Hornu (Belgium) as well as in Isy Brachot Gallery (Brussels), and Nadja Vilenne Gallery (Liège).

DVIR GALLERY
Rue de Fiennes 85, Brussels 1070

Allan McCollum Exhibition @ ICA Miami - Works Since 1969

Allan McCollum: Works Since 1969
Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami
September 2, 2020 – January 17, 2021

The Institute of Contemporary Art (ICA Miami) presents the first U.S. museum retrospective for legendary American artist ALLAN McCOLLUM (b. 1944). Allan McCollum: Works Since 1969 traces the artist’s iconoclastic philosophy on the originality, value, and context of art. While McCollum’s contributions have been the focus of six major museum exhibitions in Europe and his work is included in more than 90 museum collections worldwide, this is the first museum exhibition in the U.S. to survey his 50-year career across a range of media, including painting, sculpture, photography, rarely seen early works and large-scale installations. Works Since 1969 is curated by ICA Miami Artistic Director Alex Gartenfeld and Curator Stephanie Seidel. 

“For decades, Allan McCollum has explored how identity and community are created through collections of objects. In our fractious and digital age, his explorations of regional American culture have never been more timely,” said Alex Gartenfeld, ICA Miami’s Artistic Director. “McCollum’s work is profoundly influential on artists working on the role of the museum in society—yet has been underexplored to date. Our survey builds on ICA Miami’s history of providing the first major U.S. museum platform for artists whose work merits renewed attention and reveals insights about contemporary society and culture.” 

Organized chronologically, Works Since 1969 brings together more than more than 20 series that blur the boundaries between mass-produced object and unique, exalted artifact. Some of the artist’s earliest major series, “Bleach Paintings” and “Constructed Paintings”—both begun in 1969—reflect Allan McCollum’s interrogations of art history’s longstanding preoccupation with medium specificity. Not painted in a traditional sense, but instead made from materials widely available in supermarkets and hardware stores, Allan McCollum considers the cultural conventions surrounding painting, fabricated through its context and social significance.

Critiques of originality and value carry through Allan McCollum’s five decades of practice, demonstrated through a range of major series on view in the exhibition. These include his iconic “Surrogate Paintings” (1978– ) and “Plaster Surrogates” (1982– ), wooden wall-mounted reliefs and plaster casts shaped like framed pictures in monochromatic colors, which emphasize the conventions of framed images as a universal sign for anything meaningful and valuable. 

Demonstrating the role of scale and repetition in his work, the exhibition additionally presents two of McCollum’s iconic sculptural series, “Perfect Vehicles” (1985– ) and “Over Ten Thousand Individual Works” (1987– ), which consider methods of collecting and the ways artworks accrue visibility, meaning, and value. McCollum also explores the notion of originality through photographic work, reflected in the “Perpetual Photos” (1982- ) series. For McCollum’s ongoing series, “The Shapes Project” (2005– ), he devised a simple numerical system to designate a unique shape for each person on the planet in the year 2050 (a total of 30 billion different shapes) using a simple home computer and Adobe Illustrator. Through this series, McCollum undermines the notion that art, if it is to be of any value, must be rare.

The centerpiece of the exhibition is Allan McCollum’s rarely exhibited “regional projects,” works from the last three decades that explore how artifacts become charged with cultural meaning and how collections of objects and artifacts become agents for self-assurance and self-representation in regional communities. Works on view include The Dog from Pompei (1991), a cast of the famous form preserved as a natural mold in the volcanic ashes of Mount Vesuvius in AD 79; Lost Objects (1991– ), casts of fossilized dinosaur bones; and Natural Copies from the Coal Mines of Central Utah (1994), dinosaur tracks preserved in stone that are, themselves, copies; and THE EVENT: Petrified Lightning from Central Florida (1997) developed together with the International Lightning Research Center in Camp Blanding, Florida. 
“By rethinking modes of artistic production and distribution as parts of larger economies of value, McCollum is one of the most influential American artists working today,” said Curator Stephanie Seidel. “Over more than five decades his work has remained timely and effective at challenging aesthetic and material concerns, while critically reflecting on the museum context.” 
Exhibition Catalogue: A richly illustrated exhibition catalog accompanies Allan McCollum: Works Since 1969, and features essays by the exhibition curators, and scholars Alex Kitnick and Jennifer Jane Marshall.

ALLAN McCOLLUM (b. 1944, Los Angeles) has been making art for more than five decades. Survey exhibitions of his works have been held at, among others, the Musée d’art Moderne et Contemporain, Geneva (2006); Sprengel Museum, Hannover, Germany (1995–96); Serpentine Gallery, London (1990); Rooseum Center for Contemporary Art, Malmö, Sweden (1990); Stedelijk Van Abbemuseum, Eindhoven, The Netherlands (1989); and Portikus, Frankfurt, Germany (1988). He has produced public art projects in both the United States and Europe, and his works are held in over 90 art museum collections around the world. Allan McCollum’s work has been included in numerous group exhibitions, including “This Will Have Been: Art, Love & Politics in the 1980s,” Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2012–13); “The Pictures Generation: 1974–1984,” Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2009); “The 1991 Carnegie International,” Carnegie Museum of Art, Pittsburgh (1991); Whitney Biennial, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (1975 and 1989); “A Forest of Signs: Art in the Crisis of Representation,” Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (1989); and “Aperto,” Venice Biennale (1988).

INSTITUTE OF CONTEMPORARY ART, MIAMI
61 NE 41st Street, Miami, Florida 33137

Bob Law @ Richard Saltoun Gallery, London - Ideas, Energies, Transmutations

Bob Law: Ideas, Energies, Transmutations
Richard Saltoun Gallery, London
3 September - 31 October 2020

Richard Saltoun Gallery opens to the public for the first time in six months with an exhibition of work by the British conceptual artist BOB LAW (b. 1934 - d. 2004). Beginning in the late 1950s, Bob Law developed an abstract vocabulary that was rooted in corporeal experience yet oriented toward metaphysical concerns. Audacious in their minimalism, his drawings and paintings were shown alongside works by Jo Baer, Sol LeWitt, Robert Mangold and Robert Ryman in the early 1970s. Unlike these New York-based artists, however, Bob Law's work evolved out of an engagement with the English landscape and an esoteric range of interests including alchemy, nature mysticism, numerology, and palaeontology. Curated by the art historian Anna Lovatt, this exhibition demonstrates how Law invested austere forms with affective, wry, or whimsical qualities, contributing to a re-enchantment of abstract art that has continued since his death in 2004. 

'Ideas, Energies, Transmutations' begins with a selection of the Field drawings Bob Law produced in the late 1950s and early 1960s. In the landscape surrounding his St. Ives home, he produced a series of works in which he situated his body in relation to elements of the natural world, creating: "a kind of environmental chart, a thesis of ideas, energies, transmutations." Through this diagrammatic process Law pursued an ecstatic communion with the earth, rendered frankly erotic in some of these drawings. The skewed frames of his large-scale paintings first emerged in the Field drawings, suggesting that even Bob Law's more abstract works are numinously charged. 

Also featured in the exhibition is the ambitious, rarely-seen relief Hole within a Whole (1980). Punctuated by nails and perforated by a small rectangular window, this imposing work relates to the hypothetical sculpture Here Comes the Sun (The Devil's View) (1980), which Bob Law envisaged to mark the dawn of the third millennium. The proposed sculpture was to consist of a twenty-by-thirty-foot steel wall intended to block out the sun, save a small rectangular hole, through which light would shine onto an obelisk. Bob Law proposed that the relative positions of the sun, the wall, and the obelisk would be determined by an astronomer. 

During the early 1970s, Bob Law gained notoriety in the British press for monumental works like Mister Paranoia IV 20.11.70 (No. 95) and Drawing (Black Scribble) 10.2.72, both included in this exhibition at Richard Saltoun Gallery. Far from empty or "meaningless" as some commentators implied, these works were "brooded-over pictures," upon which Law meditated while sitting in a chair in his studio. The chair subsequently became part of Bob Law's sculptural repertoire, recalling his early work as a carpenter and introducing a humorous anthropomorphism also seen in the sculptures Young Obelisk (1981) and Reclining Obelisk (1984). Visually distinct from Law's abstract paintings and drawings, these sculptures share their Beckettian sense of absurdity and human vulnerability. 

Bob Law's work has featured in numerous exhibitions, including 'Conceptual Art in Britain 1964-1979' (group) at Tate Britain, London, UK (2016); 'Artists and Poets' (group) at Secession, Vienna, Austria (2015) curated by Ugo Rondinone; 'Abstract Drawing' (group), curated by Richard Deacon, Drawing Room, London, UK (2014); 'A House of Leaves' (group), curated by Vincent Honoré, at DRAF, London, UK (2013); 'Bob Law: Drawings, Sculpture and Paintings', Newlyn Art Gallery, Cornwall, UK, which travelled to Kettle's Yard, Cambridge, UK (1999); 'Bob Law' at Whitechapel Gallery, London, UK (1978) and '10 Black Paintings 1965-70', Museum of Modern Art, Oxford (1974), curated by Sir Nicholas Serota. His work is included in numerous private and public collections throughout the world, including Tate, London, UK; the British Museum, London, UK; The Guggenheim Museum, New York, NY; the Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; the Art Gallery of New South Wales, Sydney; Museum Sztuki, Lodz, Poland; and Panza Collection, Varese, Italy, amongst others.

RICHARD SALTOUN GALLERY
41 Dover Street, London W1S 4NS
richardsaltoun.com

________________



01/09/20

Léopold Chauveau @ Musée d'Orsay, Paris - Au pays des monstres

Au pays des monstres.
Léopold Chauveau (1870-1940)
Musée d'Orsay, Paris
Jusqu'au 13 septembre 2020

Médecin par obligation familiale, Léopold Chauveau s'est réfugié en autodidacte dans un univers artistique étrange et singulier. À la fois sculpteur, illustrateur et auteur de livres pour adultes et enfants, il est longtemps resté oublié de l'histoire de l'art, avant que plusieurs donations de son petit-fils au musée d’Orsay ne permettent sa redécouverte. Désormais riche de 465 dessins, 48 sculptures et d’archives liées à sa production artistique, le musée propose au public une immersion dans son oeuvre, en résonance avec ses sources d’inspiration et ses contemporains.

Les premières sculptures de Léopold Chauveau sont datées 1905, alors qu’il réside à Versailles, non loin du peintre et sculpteur Nabi Georges Lacombe. Les monstres deviennent rapidement un leitmotiv de sa production, en sculpture comme en dessin, avec la première série de la Maison des monstres (1910-1919). Hybrides, ses créatures sont souvent attachantes, maladroites et comme étonnées de leur propre présence. Semblant sortir de son inconscient, elles constituent pour Léopold Chauveau de véritables compagnons, le peuple d'un monde imaginaire dans lequel il trouverait refuge, loin de l’exerce de la médecine qu’il abhorre. Malgré leur singularité, les monstres sculptés de l'artiste peuvent s'inscrire dans une généalogie de l'histoire de l'art, on pense notamment aux gargouilles médiévales ou à des influences japonaises. Pendant la première guerre mondiale, Léopold Chauveau oeuvre comme chirurgien aux armées et doit faire face à une série de deuils. Durant l’année 1917, il envoie à ses enfants des cartes postales du front illustrées de monstres à la plume proches de ceux de la Maison des monstres.

Vers 1922, il abandonne la médecine et se consacre à sa production littéraire et artistique. Léopold Chauveau se lie alors avec des écrivains tels Roger Martin du Gard, André Gide ou encore Paul Desjardins. Il écrit puis illustre des recueils d’histoires pour enfants. Dépourvues de morale, ironiques et souvent cruelles, les histoires de Léopold Chauveau mettent en scène des animaux confrontés à des péripéties fantastiques. Il dessine également des Paysages monstrueux, étendues antédiluviennes et désertiques où évoluent des monstres biomorphes qui se plient à des activités étranges. Léopold Chauveau adopte un trait synthétique, précis et incisif pour créer ses personnages, d’un trait souple à l’encre de Chine dans un style naïf inspiré par l’univers enfantin, dans des décors simplifiés mais explicites. Léopold Chauveau a aussi illustré de grands classiques (L'Ancien et le Nouveau Testament, Les Fables de La Fontaine), dont il a même parfois revisité le texte (Le Roman de Renard). Au début des années 1930, Léopold Chauveau manifeste son antifascisme dans le roman illustré le Bouffon Babriot, qui conte avec humour noir et des moyens plastiques épurés la montée sur le trône d’un bouffon doté de bon sens, qui renverse la hiérarchie militaire et prône la paix. Cette exposition permet une complète redécouverte d'un oeuvre sans équivalent à son époque.

Commissariat :
Ophélie Ferlier-Bouat, conservatrice Sculpture au musée d’Orsay
Leïla Jarbouai, conservatrice Arts graphiques au musée d'Orsay
Avec Géraldine Masson, collaboratrice scientifique
Scénographie : Martin Michel

Cette exposition sera présentée à La Piscine, musée d'Art et d'Industrie André Diligent de Roubaix du 17 octobre 2020 au 17 janvier 2021.

Musée d'Orsay
1 rue de la Légion d'Honneur, 75007 Paris

Zhang Xuerui @ Galerie Urs Meile Beijing - River with Three Buoys

Zhang Xuerui 
River with Three Buoys
Galerie Urs Meile Beijing
August 29 - October 25, 2020

We can imagine Zhang Xuerui’s paintings as building facades, with equal squares dividing the entire canvas. These squares are parallel to the frame, positing a geometric certainty. The dynamic of the painting comes from its colors—in most cases, each square of color is linked to its neighbor by an almost imperceptible color gradient, making the overall rhythm appear soft and unhurried. The interval shifts in color achieve spatial depth in the picture, but the story within each window is concealed, like flickering lights of varying tone faintly shining through the curtains, while we can never know exactly what is unfolding behind the curtains. They tell a story through non-representational methods, or more precisely, they correspond to a stream-of-consciousness monologue.

“I hope to manifest in my paintings intimate relationships that are hard to realize in real life, like the kind of intimate relationship I have with colors.” 1 She has not pulled herself or us to the metaphysical level, but has instead stressed the parallel nature of reality through logicalized production. “The picture is ‘close,’ while the theme is ‘distant’.” 2 This is like when you turn on the car stereo, and get into the melody of a song, becoming isolated from the swarm of traffic around you, or even the entire urban environment, your consciousness flowing within that sense of time altered by the melody. For Zhang Xuerui, the squares are elements constructing her abstract melody. She has transplanted her emotions onto these squares, steadily realizing that intimate relationship. Here there are none of the drastic undulations or perturbations of reality; anxiety and fear have been transformed. The stronger her intimacy with the colors, the more isolated she becomes from reality.

As far back as the 1920s, Le Corbusier and his friends were saying that a painting is a formula. 3 This can help us further understand Zhang Xuerui’s creative method. She begins by selecting the “three primary colors” of that painting, three color fields, and places them “in three corners of the canvas, which I call A, B and C. If there are ten squares between A and B, then each square is a different ratio of mixture between the colors A and B, forming a gradual color transition. The progression of the colors setting out from these three corners to the fourth corner is unpredictable. The color that ends up in the fourth corner is entirely an ‘accident.’” 4 You can get a sense of how her painting process is like a meticulous computation, with the outcome of the fourth corner being calculated virtually one step at a time. It is an “accident” in that textures, emotions or hidden desires form active factors that follow along the entire creative progression, until the fourth corner redeems the sensational undercurrents. When this color field emerges, it implies a certain harmony.

Gazing at these pictures, I sometimes suspect that she has intentionally put off the arrival at the final outcome. Under the supposition of the three primary colors, the colors are constantly combined, implying that she spends much time in phases of gray, patiently laboring and circling back. Like a woman of the ancient world absorbed in her weaving, Zhang quietly enjoys and magnifies this method that is at once for passing and resisting the passage of time. The completed works show no traces of being covered over day after day, but are instead juxtaposed as still frames, as if the traces of the passage of each needle, each thread, are presented in their entirety, demanding close rumination.

In her most recent works, she has changed the excessively slow progression of before, a shift that appears in the picture as relatively strong contrasts in color from one field to the next, or even within a cluster of color fields, in something like a high note suddenly bursting out of a musical movement, creating a floating effect and highlighting the sense of motion in the picture. But her basic methodology has not changed. The visual precision brought about by the contrast, and the overall elegance and harmony, still stand as the distinctive markers of her personality. Her three primary colors can be seen as three buoys that give her a cross section of the river of time. Even that unpredictable fourth corner merely implies a single square in the picture; it won’t flow out of bounds or turn against the existing structure. It is called ending, but it has actually taken part in the entire flow, an equal element and component of the process, which is why when Zhang Xuerui completes a painting, she can change the orientation in which the painting is hung.

Text: Zhu Zhu

ZHANG XUERUI (born in 1979 in Shanxi, China) currently lives and works in Beijing, China. She graduated from Central Academy of Fine Arts in Beijing in 2004. Her recent solo exhibitions include: The Everyday as Ontology, Galerie Urs Meile, Lucerne, Switzerland (2019); The God of Small Things, Art Basel Miami Beach-Kabinett, Miami, USA (2018); Colours in A Breeze: Zhang Xuerui Solo Exhibition, Leo Gallery, Hong Kong, China (2017); Zhang Xuerui: Recent Works, Ginkgo Space, Beijing, China (2017). Recent group shows include: You Are a Goddess, You Are a Demon, Boxes Art Space, Shenzhen, China (2019); Letters from Beijing, Gwangju Museum of Art, Gwangju, Korea (2019); The Exhibition of Annual of Contemporary Art of China 2017, Minsheng Art Museum, Beijing, China (2018); Encounter Asia—Multi-vision of Youth Art, the Museum of Sichuan Fine Arts Institute, Chongqing, China (2018); Nonfigurative, Shanghai 21th Century Minsheng Art Museum, Shanghai, China (2015); Negotiations – The 2nd Today’s Documents 2010, Today Art Museum, Beijing, China (2010). She participated in Artist in Residence program “Kulturkontaka Austria” in Vienna in 2015. Her works have been collected by public collections including White Rabbit Gallery and Cruthers Art Foundation.

1 Zhang Xuerui Interview: “Clouds on the Edge of the Sky” (Tian Bian Yi Duo Yun), Cao Siyu, Hi Art, October 24, 2015.
2 ibid.
3 Arsén Pohribn••, Abstract Painting, Wang Duanting, trans., Gold Wall Press, 2013.
4 Zhang Xuerui interview.

GALERIE URS MEILE BEIJING
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