He leads a very personal and extremely thorough search which consists in structuring the space. He installs metal pipes that fall from the ceiling, hangs letters, and traces lines of black adhesive tape to create an astonishing sensation of volume while allowing the gaze to penetrate.
Curator Hélène Audiffren
Peter Downsbrough has examined language and constructed space
since the mid 1960s. He leads a very personal and extremely thorough
search which consists in structuring the space and creating discreet
yet clearly visible volumes.
He uses a refined plastics vocabulary, made from simple geometric
figures, lines, words and painted surfaces. His numerous artistic
practices - sculptures, photographs, mural works, books, films, publications,
sound works, urban space interventions - are based on the concept
of position, sequence, interval and frame, and question the viewpoint.
The combination of linguistic and geometric elements thus formalises
spaces leading to a plethora of interpretations.
The exhibition presented at the Languedoc-Roussillon Regional Museum
of Contemporary Art in Sérignan, the largest ever presented in France,
will highlight the full extent of his work. Peter Downsbrough intervenes
in the museum forecourt, then from the entrance through the bookshop and along the corridor to guide us around the exhibition space.
He installs metal pipes that fall from the ceiling to graze the floor,
hangs letters, and traces lines of black adhesive tape to create an
astonishing sensation of volume while allowing the gaze to penetrate.
His process of optical cutting, refocusing, suggests a new understanding
of the space. The scattered words, short speech (encore, là, et, vers,
as, but, and...), encourage a search beyond the visual field. His
interventions reveal open intervals which change according to the
view point.
Several new sculptures with geometric forms, made using previously
established construction principles, take on his concerns with the full
and the empty, notions of situation and context.
An extensive set of his photographic series, presented mostly in the
form of diptychs or triptychs, highlight the construction of urban space
through his framing work. A selection of his films explore the possibilities
of the discontinuous and flows through the use of travellings and the
variation of viewing angles. His still and moving images are as much
readings of architectural structures as functional structures of the city.
The exhibition is supplemented by a presentation in the graphic arts
exhibition room of his multiple prints and many books (he has produced
101), in which the graphic and typographic arrangements always derive
from the same mechanisms.
All of Peter Downsbrough's works evoke place, placement and
displacement. They result in a relationship, offering the viewer to take
up a position: "the pieces are not 'objects' but rather elements which
engage the subject in a dialogue".
A publication enriched with text by Raphaël Pirenne will be released
for the exhibition.
Two accompanying exhibitions are dedicated to the artist at the
Galerie Martine Aboucaya and the Galerie des Multiples.
Architect by training, Peter Downsbrough was born in 1940 in New
Brunswick (USA). Lives and works in Brussels (Belgium).
From his debut in 1969, he has participated in numerous exhibitions
in Europe and the USA.
Image: AND, 2009. Painted metal, 155 x 22 cm. Courtesy of Galerie Martine Aboucaya, Paris. Photography J-P Planchon.
Press contact:
Sylvie Caumet caumet.sylvie@cr-languedocroussillon.fr
Isabelle Durand durand.isabelle@cr-languedocroussillon.fr
Preview Saturday 1st March 2014 at 6:30pm
Languedoc-Roussillon Regional Museum of Contemporary Art
146 avenue de la Plage - BP4 - 34410 Sérignan
Open Tuesday to Friday from 10am to 6pm, and weekends from 1pm to 6pm,
Closed on Mondays and public holidays.
Admission:
€5 normal price
€3 reduced price: groups of more than 10 people, students
Free: Art and architecture students, under 18s, journalists, job seekers, recipients of Minimas Sociaux (French state benefits), members of ICOM.