Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois
Paris
36 rue de Seine
+33 146346107 FAX +33 143251880
WEB
Two exhibitions
dal 13/4/2012 al 14/5/2012
mon-sat 10.30am-1pm and 2pm-7pm

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Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois



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Boris Achour



 
calendario eventi  :: 




13/4/2012

Two exhibitions

Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois, Paris

Boris Achour drops his work off without installing it, neither showing nor showing-off, slipping through an artspace (sometimes a place for showing and showing off). David Raymond Conroy uses the dynamics of cinema to construct a space in which the three accomplices in the aesthetic experience-artist, work, viewer-seek each other out through speculation about their relative positions.


comunicato stampa

Boris Achour
Oh Lumière

The third eyelid

Rambling through the city then uninterruptedly through a gallery – dubiously but gracefully, or maybe awkwardly but decidedly, the way Boris Achour does, dropping his work off without installing it – neither showing nor showing-off – slipping through an artspace (sometimes a place for showing and showing off) like a dancer in a moon mask – more moonchild than man in the moon – and seeing each exhibit as part of an unfettered outing, a stopover on an itinerary to be (re)appraised retrospectively, looking back on the details, the surprises, the marvellous everyday tweakings – the jackstraws campfire, a flashing beacon in a plastic bag, a nap on a neatly trimmed hedge…

So, a visit as poem? A well-earned rest? Angelus Silesius's “Rose without why” poem reprised by Achour in an earlier exhibition was not the rose prized by 70s/80s gurus and glitterati: this was an extraterrestrial rose, alighting where there was no one left able to recognise it, a creature thus cleansed of all poetic or scholarly or grammatical anxieties, a kind of wild yet highly disciplined rose-poem, cut up randomly but line by line, mystically antiquated – a rose-to-be.

The Eluard/Godard poem the visitor from the moon will read here is by neither of them: lyrically put to music in Alphaville, fascinated with Anna Karina's face and its transition from light to shade – a kind of hypnosis, a Fritz Lang reminder of the love/danger binomial – it too has fallen from another planet, brutally pulped by its fall then instantly resurrected by a touchingly meagre flash of brilliance.

We might deduce that the visiting moonchild's eye asks to be closed nocturnally at the Crédac art centre and opened diurnally at the Vallois gallery — or vice versa. The art of Boris Achour can be seen as on-again off-again, like the third eyelid whose constant blinking protects night birds from sudden dazzlement. Black Hole Sun evokes a “maybe-monument” to the never-made works that are part of a very real oeuvre. The shape of things to come can only be told in terms of the present; and the person best equipped for the telling is not the hunter in his darkness, but a dancer making the floor ring out on-again off-again, a tap dancer belonging neither to day or night, but perpetually between the two, endlessly oscillating as sound saturation and perfect silence alternate at the speed of light.

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Project Room :
David Raymond Conroy
L’homme qui voulait savoir

This exhibition takes its title from the film L’homme qui voulait savoir (literally “The Man Who Wanted to Know”, English release title “The Vanishing”), directed by Paris-born Dutch director George Sluizer in 1988. In the film, the young couple Rex and Saskia have stopped at a freeway service area when Saskia inexplicably vanishes; Rex spends the next three years trying to find her, in what is not so much as thriller as a meditation on the destructiveness of an obsessive need to know. When Rex ultimately solves the mystery he too disappears, leaving the viewer, who has identified with him all along, deprived of the closure that the end of this kind of film traditionally brings.

For his first exhibition in France British artist David Raymond Conroy uses the dynamics of cinema to construct a space in which the three accomplices in the aesthetic experience – artist, work, viewer – seek each other out through speculation about their relative positions.

The poster for the French version of L’homme qui voulait savoir is included in the exhibition, as if its presence as object were needed to justify the borrowing of the title – even if it provides no extra information. The artist himself vanishes behind this mirror-effect. Jonathan Richman, iconic former leader of the Modern Lovers, is seen in excerpts from various video interviews, expressing himself in such a spontaneous, naively direct way that we find ourselves wondering if he isn't playing a part. Also speaking in the first person, David Raymond Conroy similarly explores the possibilities of sincere personal discourse in the video Hauling/It is not the past, but the future, that determines the present. The artist seems to waver between the vanishing of the artistic act and expression of a subjective point of view.

Two installations continue this inquiry into oscillation. The first is a carefully constructed pile of pieces of furniture, topped by a screen showing video images of similar stacks found in the street or at markets. While the video is running the stack functions as a base and our attention is fixed on the images scrolling by. When the video switches off the gallery context becomes more tangible and the assemblage turns into a sculpture.

The second installation comprises three movable stage partitions which block direct access to the gallery's other room; some visitors will not realise that this is a work of art until they succeed in entering the second space and discover that the backs of the partitions are completely covered with Dutch wax fabric. What we have here may be an artwork pretending to be a wall or an artwork pretending not to be an artwork.

Quoting Jeff Wall from memory, Conroy remarks that “the work is not a sea of meaning from which the viewer can fish at random.” Here he scatters the space with elements which, like clues in a police investigation, enable us to explain the provenance or the shaping of certain processes: the poster provides the title, a video documents the sources of inspiration of the sculpture it is presented on, and the wrong side turns out to be the right side. These factors, enhanced by our detachment in interpreting them, highlight the gap between “knowing” and “understanding”.

Image: Boris Achour, Conatus : Moment, 2008 Wood, chain, paint, glitters — 35 3/8 × 23 5/8 × 2 in — unique piece Courtesy of the artist & Galerie G-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois, Paris

Galerie Georges-Philippe & Nathalie Vallois
36 rue de Seine - Paris
Monday – Saturday 10:30 am – 1 pm / 2 pm – 7 pm

IN ARCHIVIO [11]
Alain Jacquet
dal 6/9/2015 al 10/10/2015

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