The current show features a selection of the artist's projects related to a new publication entitled 'Ivry souterrain'. Each work or show is an objective reproduction of the long-term experience of a place and a synthesis of a large amount of information.
Since the mid-1990s, Lara Almarcegui has been interested in the “interstices” that exist in urban and suburban
areas, the empty lots, underground passages, ruins and
construction sites, spaces that are normally ignored or
overlooked, which she rigorously studies in order to
pass on her experience of them.
Invited in 2010 to bring her brand of research to the
area bounded by Ivry-sur-Seine, Almarcegui focused
on the city’s underground reality. The current show
at Crédac features a selection of the artist’s projects
related to a new publication entitled Ivry souterrain
(Underground Ivry).
The city of Ivry-sur-Seine is currently undergoing
enormous change and a profound redefining of its territory, where major development projects are about to
break ground. These sites are already redrawing the
map and revamping land use, notably to the east and the
vast, formerly industrial zone of Ivry-port (now known
as Ivry Confluences), and to the west along the former
N305 route (now RD5). For centuries, with its many
quarries and warehouses, Ivry helped to build and feed
the Paris metropolis. The disappearance of once-thriving industries has left behind wasteland and economically depressed zones.
Today’s change is taking shape around several key
points, including the economy, diversification of services, housing, and education and recreation zones. These
mutations are fashioning a new urban landscape.
Based on a synthesis of current data on the state of the
city’s underground areas, the book Ivry souterrain examines the different periods and below-ground levels of
human activity, networks and infrastructures. Old quarries and labyrinthine basements, sacred thermal springs,
metro tunnels, buried lakes, networks of water, energy
and telecommunications present a genuine portrait of the
city through what lies beneath it.
In several of its manifestations, Almarcegui’s work
resembles a straightforward inventory of data related to
a given site. It is an inventory that is both “horizontal”
(territories that she reveals through maps and slideshows accompanied by visitors’ guides), and “vertical”
(the geological nature of a particular area, construction
materials or materials coming from a destruction of some
kind, which she presents in the form of lists or installations). Each work or show is an objective reproduction
of the long-term experience of a place and a synthesis
of a large amount of information. This reproduction may
assume a monumental aspect (the Rubble Mountains,
shown notably at Secession, Vienna in 2010 and currently on view at MUSAC in León, Spain), or it may be
slight and minimalist, such as slideshows, guides, lists of
the weights of materials—so many typologies springing
from research or education sources enabling the viewerreader to make a mental representation of the spaces in
question.
The artist also offers in-the-field experience with visitors to her shows, inviting them to join her on guided
discoveries of the places and construction sites that are
the subject of her research. Through a physical understanding of a place, these visits help the people there to
reappropriate the issues at stake.
The notion of change is central to this artistic practice,
which views the city as a living entity in an approach
inherited from psychogeography (as defined by Ralph
Rumney). If indeed wastelands figure among the rare
places that still fall outside the economic imperatives and
mechanisms of control that characterize the postmodern
city (absence of clearly indicated borders, hygiene and
security monitoring, and harboring people who are not
officially there, etc.), they are eventually co-opted and
transformed. Thus the guides Almarcegui has produced
of wastelands in London, São Paulo, Rome or Sharjah,
for example, crystalize these sites’ divisions and history
at a given moment, often at the dawn of major development projects like the Olympic Games, revealing the
transitory nature of all space.
While the artist’s projects are endemic and intrinsic to
their context, they also allow her to freeze a fleeting
moment and, through the work of memory, locate it in a
longer, more expansive timeframe. The integrity, clarity
and systematization of her art with respect to a specific
place point up its singularity while making it possible to
tease out the issues that have a global resonance.
Almarcegui thus combines a social commitment with her
analytical art practice. Going beyond merely laying out
what is, she turns a critical eye on the notion of progress
and the destructive consequences of urban development
subjected to financial imperatives. Questions connected
with the environment, the denial of natural spaces, are
some of the concerns underlying her artistic commitment.
By pointing up the land’s subjugation to building development, Lara Almarcegui produces work in an approach
that proves political and ecological, in the original sense
of the term, i.e., the understanding of what surrounds
us. Because they speak to us from margins of the land
and society, her works stand as invitations to leave the
exhibition space and reappropriate our environment.
Image: The Rubble Mountain, Sint-Truiden, 2005. Courtesy of the artist and Ellen De Bruijne, Amsterdam.
Press Contact:
Axelle Blanc - Head of communication +33 (0)1 49602504 ablanc.credac@ivry94.fr
Opening on Thursday, 18 April 2013 from 5 PM to 9 PM
Centre d’art contemporain d’Ivry - le Crédac
La Manufacture des Œillets 25-29 rue Raspail, 94200 Ivry-sur-Seine, FR
Open every day (except Mondays)
from 2 to 6 PM, weekends from 2 to 7 PM
Free admission