Elisabetta Benassi
Shaun Gladwell
Thomas Lindvig
Tuomo Manninen
Andrea Mastrovito
Luc Mattenberger
Rob Montgomery
Xavier Veilhan
Patrick Weidmann
Luc Mattenberge
Barbara Polla
Cars & Bikes is a group show centered on cars and bikes; esthetic and sexual objects fully integrated in our history, dreams and world. It is a modest tribute to mechanical beauty constantly reflected in our lives and in our dreams. For his first solo exhibition, Luc Mattenberger offers to take over the gallery's area with a new installation that will guide us through time flow, space, and of course, machines. Machines that can both help to straighten what time has loosened, and loosen what men have straightened.
Cars & Bikes
curated by Barbara Polla
After men’s beauty (Handsome, 2006, in collaboration with Gianni Romano) and
men’s labor (Working Men, 2008, in collaboration with Paul Ardenne), and before
looking into machinery (Machines Martiales, 2011-2012, in collaboration with Paul
Ardenne and Luc Mattenberger), Analix Forever gallery is creating still another very
masculine exhibition centered on cars and bikes; esthetic and sexual objects fully
integrated in our history, dreams and world.
Once ejected from the uterus, their first vehicle, this primitive means of transport in
which they swayed while discovering the pleasure of a warm, effortless and safe trip,
children and men will share a single dream: the dream of creating a comparable
adventure. Thereupon, they will start building bodyworks even finer, lighter, stronger
and tougher than the woman’s body: admire the glow, caress the curves... Appreciate
Tuomo Manninen’s Car Show 2, these cars buried under the snow suggesting soft
breasts with nipples that sometimes carelessly come out of their milky environment...
Further appreciate Rob Montgomery’s truck with angel wings, Angel, in front of the
gallery during the opening. We also have to analyze the engine - as the engine is life
itself. Men’s unlimited interest in understanding how both work, is illustrated by
Patrick Weidmann’s explorations, when he infinitely expands parts of his engines as if
he was trying to gain possession of their secrets. This fascination is also represented in
Thomas Lindvig’s wrecked car – as the crash is an inherent part of the pleasure found
in automobiles.
For Luc Mattenberger, engine rimes with burning and inexhaustible passion. He
worships the noise, the smell, the shape and the function. His Excavatrice bicylindre
four beats seams only to wait for his master who will turn it on again.
Motorbikes have a huge advantage over cars: they are bisexual. They combine the
dynamic of a man’s sex, to the gentleness of feminine curves. They are fiercely
aerodynamic and fly like Andrea Mastrovito’s paper Ducati Desmosedici, leaving
behind a delicate red-hot trail. They count many phallic extensions, such as the
exhaust pipes, and they know how to leap and roar like a warrior and his horse. But
they also have a conveniently accessible engine that can be explored with eyes and
hands at any given time, as Xavier Veilhan invites us to do.
Motorcycles are capable of making us nostalgic of fusion like nothing else. This fusion
is expressed in Elisabetta Benassi’s video, Time Code: fusion between the woman who
drives and the man who follows, between Pasolini and Benassi, between time and
cultures, words and images, gender and generation. Fusion again between the
mythical dark knight, as much metallic as he is delicate, and the animal. Shaun
Gladwell’s video, Apologies 1 – 6, shows the fusion between life and death, an
existential fusion that a car could never reveal.
With art works from:
Elisabetta Benassi (Italy)
Shaun Gladwell (Australia)
Thomas Lindvig (Denmark)
Tuomo Manninen (Finland)
Andrea Mastrovito (Italy)
Luc Mattenberger (Switzerland)
Rob Montgomery (UK)
Xavier Veilhan (France)
Patrick Weidmann (Switzerland)
This exhibition is part of OFF in the 50 JPG program.
....................................
DARK MATTER Luc Mattenberger Solo Show
For his first solo exhibition at Analix Forever, Luc Mattenberger offers to take over the gallery's area with a new installation that will guide us through time
flow, space, and of course, machines. Machines that can both help to straighten what
time has loosened, and loosen what men have straightened. Mattenberger, who Paul
Ardenne describes as a "transcendental mechanic", is also interested in the physics
behind every link, specifically between dark matter and light.
Image: Shaun Gladwell, Apologies 1-6, 2007-09
Opening: May 20th 2010 from 6 pm
Analix Forever
rue de l'Arquebuse 25, Geneve
Tuesday to Saturday, from 2 pm to 7 pm or by appointment
free admission