Gregory Buchert
Le Bureau
Christophe Lemaitre
Benoit Dagron
Alexis Guillier
Paul-Herve' Parsy
Salvage Art Institute
AXA Art France
Pierre Bonnard
Jean-Luc Blanc
Marcel Duchamp
Alberto Giacometti
Fernand Leger
Pierre Mercier
The life and death of works of art. The exhibition sketches the outlines of several possible models for evoking in a tangible way what the dismantled works have become in our eyes: sample, definitive relic, cult object, souvenir, archaeological object, fake or transubstantiation.
A project by Christophe Lemaitre. With Gregory Buchert, Le Bureau/, Benoit Dagron, Alexis Guillier, Paul-Hervé Parsy, Salvage Art Institute (et AXA Art France). About Pierre Bonnard and Jean-Luc Blanc, Marcel Duchamp, Alberto Giacometti, Fernand Léger, Pierre Mercier.
At the time of the release of the publication entitled « Machine » (2012) which was co-published
by Cneai and Mac/val, the restorer Benoit Dragon presented a collection of relics of modern and
contemporary art works: flags by Buren, extracted nails on Fernand Léger canvases, wires from
Calder mobiles, frames signed by De Staël, etc. These objects, which used to be but are now no
longer works of art, gathered over the course of years and many restorations by Benoit Dragon,
are the starting point for « La vie et la mort des oeuvres d'art » (the life and death of works of
art).
From 2006, with the project « Aakey », François Piron put together a reliquary in a tiny cell at
the Centre de Création Contemporaine de Tours using a selection of fragmentary artworks
confided by several artist friends (the part for the whole). Seven years later, the display
« Keeping is not collection » set up by Jason Hwang at the Los Angeles public library, re-turned
into fetishes artefacts still embodied by the time of production of the work from which they
have been separated, lost. Transformed by the display case, they were made positive again.
These two examples, similar to Benoit Dagron's collection, bear witness to a shared
contemporary preoccupation for the fate of objects which were but are no longer works of art:
with artists such as Alexis Guillier (« Reworks », from 2009), Gregory Buchert (« Le musée
domestiqué », from 2012), or even with projects such as « Gallery of Lost art » (Tate Modern,
2012-2013), « Reversibility: A theatre of de-creation » (Pierre Bal-Blanc, 2008-2012) and the
Salvage art institute (from 2009, Elka Krajewska's project takes stock and re-popularises the
case of damaged works considered by insurers as no-longer-art). As part of the exhibition
« Le syndrôme de Bonnard » at the Villa du Parc (Annemasse, 2014), the curatorial collective
Le Bureau/, with the museum's agreement, invited artists to reprise their works contained in the
Mamco's collection. The artists operated in place of restorers. The same restorer who at times,
as Paul-Hervé Parsy demonstrated with « Fountain », operates in place of the artist: if
restoration is always an act of production, the specific example of « Fountain » at the Pompidou
Centre, after 1993 and 2006's degradations, is exciting in the sense that it produced an original
(thereafter different from the other instances edited by Arturo Schwarz in 1964, the restored
readymade became a unique work) and a fake (one generally says hyper-restoration; since a
restored readymade, having become original, fundamentally contradicts Marcel Duchamp's act).
Thus, despite the cosmetic continuity conservation work carried out on the object, in reality it
was in the one same act that the day it was restored Marcel Duchamp's work ceased to exist.
«The life and death of works of art » sketches the outlines of several possible models for
evoking in a tangible way what these dismantled works have become in our eyes: sample,
definitive relic, non-definitive relic, cult object, souvenir, archaeological object, fake or
transubstantiation.
At Chatou, a collection of artefacts are presented on the floating lines of fine structures made
from bent iron tubes by the designers Camille Platevoet and Arnaud Daffos: the publication
« Machine » (Benoit Dagron, Christophe Lemaitre and Aurélien Mole, 2012); the extracted nails
from a Fernand Léger painting (Benoit Dagron collection); a model, a photograph and audio
recording of a text read by Gregory Buchert (« Le musée domestiqué », concerning an artwork
deconstructed by Pierre Mercier); a touched up exhibition catalogue by Jean-Luc Blanc
(suggested by le Bureau/); a damaged work by Alberto Giacometti considered by its owner, the
insurer AXA Art in a state of « total loss » (suggested by the Salvage art institute); a new video
by Alexis Guillier in the context of his project « Reworks », which will evolve throughout the
course of the exhibition.
Christophe Lemaitre, October 2014.
With support from the DRAC Île-de-France, AXA Art France and the fondation Giacometti (Paris).
Press Enquiries:
Agathe Hoffmann +33 (1)39524535 hoffmann@cneai.com
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