Mike Bouchet
Cesar
John de Andrea
Tara Donovan
Elmgreen & Dragset
Laurent Grasso
Candida Hofer
KAWS
Bertrand Lavier
Heinz Mack
Pierre Paulin
Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian
Jesus-Rafael Soto
Xavier Veilhan
A dialogue between Pierre Paulin, designs produced in limited editions, with works by contemporary artists such as Mike Bouchet, Cesar, John De Andrea, Tara Donovan, Elmgreen & Dragset, Laurent Grasso, Candida Hofer...
Mike Bouchet, César, John de Andrea, Tara Donovan,
Elmgreen & Dragset, Laurent Grasso, Candida Höfer,
KAWS, Bertrand Lavier, Heinz Mack, Pierre Paulin, Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Jesús-Rafael Soto, Xavier Veilhan
“I was aiming to show just how far we could make modernity go.”
Pierre PAULIN
Held from 22 October to 19 December, the exhibition “Paulin, Paulin, Paulin,” at
Galerie Perrotin, Paris offers a dialogue between Pierre Paulin designs produced
in limited editions by Paulin, Paulin, Paulin (in particular La Déclive from 1966,
plus the “Jardin à la française” armchairs, tables and carpets made specially
for the Palais d’Iéna in 1987; Dune and Tapis-siège designed for the Herman
Miller project in 1970, etc.), with works by contemporary artists such as Mike
Bouchet, César, John De Andrea, Tara Donovan, Elmgreen & Dragset, Laurent
Grasso, Candida Höfer, KAWS, Bertrand Lavier, Heinz Mack, Monir Shahroudy
Farmanfarmaian, Jesús-Rafael SOTO, and Xavier Veilhan. A number of these
artists have used Paulin designs in their own work (Bertrand Lavier, Elmgreen
& Dragset, Candida Höfer) while others have created pieces that suggest loose
formal affinities or evoke Paulin’s universe.
Paulin, Paulin, Paulin, the firm founded by Pierre Paulin’s family in 2008, works to
promote his work. Paulin, Paulin, Paulin produces limited editions of his designs
that never got beyond prototype stage, or that were made as an edition of one
for special commissions, or that were never produced. They collaborate with
the finest craftsmen and are backed by the expertise of Michel Chalard, Paulin’s
right-hand man and technical adviser.
The official names of Pierre Paulin’s creations evoke the inventory or industrial
models numbers (F560, F437, F582, F577, etc.), but we are more familiar with
the descriptive titles of these pieces among others – Mushroom (1960), Orange
Slice (1960), Ribbon (1966), Tongue (1967) – that institution such as MoMA
New York acquired in 1967. These iconic objects by the most famous French
designer of his day heralded the new society being shaped by the massive
cultural, economic and technological changes of the early 1960s. Paulin’s
furniture fitted the forms of the human body as it freed itself of social constraints.
His rigorous research into new materials (elasticated fabrics and polyurethane
foam, for example), combined with innovative construction methods placing
wellbeing at the heart of the process, authorised all kinds of arrangements
and made space malleable. Paulin’s radical artistic stance conjoined formal
modularity with sensuous functionalism. His travels in Scandinavia (1951) and Japan (1963) made a lasting impact on his work and aesthetic approach,
which he also applied to the interior commissioned for the private apartments
of Georges Pompidou at the presidential palace, the Elysée, in 1971 (an
ensemble that was even more audacious than the “modern, but classical” pieces
commissioned by François Mitterrand in 1983). The body must be one with its
surroundings, or rather, the opposite: the floor, walls and ceiling were conceived
as a harmonious whole. The tendency to create a low centre of gravity echoed
the interiors of Japanese houses and nomads’ tents.
The modular undulations of La Déclive (1966), a serial succession of curving
foam seating bars interlinking on an articulated metal frame, give it a weightless
quality. To date, there existed only two prototypes of this piece, one of which
entered the collection of the Musée National d’Art Moderne/Centre de Création
Industrielle in 2003. Atypical, half sculpture and half furniture, La Déclive’s
voluptuous silhouette contrasts with its precisely crafted and captures its
creator’s quest: “I am what you could call a para-artist. Someone somewhere
between the artistic and the technical spheres. And this only works if it excels
in both.”
In Bertrand Lavier’s “Paulin/Planokind” the Tongue chair is placed on top of a
drawings cabinet, and thereby raised to ready-made status, in a mischievous
twist on the idea of cultural heritage. The painting “Walt Disney Productions
no. 13” playfully creates a real artwork from the cartoon world of the Mickey
Mouse Museum.
The themes in the paintings of Mike Bouchet and KAWS are similarly inspired
by Pop Art and the consumer society in which it was rooted.
Dune and the tapis-siège designed by Paulin in 1970 for a housing project
conceived as a manifesto for a new art of living were commissioned by the
Herman Miller company, which also produced pieces by Charles et Ray Eames,
whose work Paulin had long admired. The subjacent idea was that people could
combine different elements, assembling them or disconnecting them as the
mood took them, and thus be the architects of their own interior. The maquette
for this project, which was never produced, entered the MNAM/CCI collection
in 2003. The prototypes have been displayed for the first time by Louis Vuitton
and Paulin, Paulin, Paulin, during Design Miami 2014.
The work by John de Andrea, a hyperrealist figure of a languorous naked woman,
sitting on a Dune, highlights its sensuality, as does another figure, lying in the
middle of a carpet-chair which is half origami and half oriental carpet, as does
the one reclining casually on “Jardin à la française” carpet.
The performance by Elmgreen & Dragset, Untitled (Home is the Place You
Left), was seen, notably, at the 53rd Venice Biennale in 2009, when the artists
occupied the Danish and Nordic pavilions. In one of the two houses owned by
fictive collectors (that of Mr. B, who was found dead in his swimming pool), a
naked young man was reading and listening to music on headphones. Here, he
is seen sitting in an F444 armchair in leather and steel, seemingly oblivious to
the gallery’s visitors (Thursday October 22, Friday 23, Saturday 24 from 11am
to 7 pm then every Saturday from 3pm to 7pm).
Further in, the Expansion n°9 by César (1970) embodies the unctuous density
of paint using organic polyurethane foam (one of Paulin’s favoured materials),
here frozen in its flow.
In 1986–87 Paulin worked on a commission for the French Ministry of Culture/
Mobilier national, for the large colonnaded hall in the Palais d’Iéna built by
Auguste Perret in 1939, and now the home of the Conseil Économique et
Social. His “Jardin à la française” divided this immense hall into eight spaces for
intimate conversation, each comprising low tables in sycamore wood (previously
existing only as a drawing), flecked maple and aluminium with chairs in sycamore,
aluminium and foam. The geometrical lines echo the coffered ceilings, fitting
discreetly into the imposing, majestic architecture. The patterns on the carpet
partially reprise the project for a stone garden in the Palais Royal, in a competition
won by Daniel Buren’s columns in 1986.
Finally, the table “Cathedral” in aluminium and glass, which Paulin considered
his masterpiece, combines the precision of engineering with the highly wrought
curves of Gothic architecture.
The mobiles made by Xavier Veilhan is a synthesis of his aesthetic and technical
experiments, bringing together diverse creative fields such as architecture design, music and cinema. These are imbued with the modernist spirit of the
20th century and certainly have much in common with Paulin’s concerns.
In 2005 Candida Höfer took ghostly photographs of the Grande Galerie at the
Musée du Louvre, punctuated by Paulin’s circular, collective “borne” (milestone)
benches from 1969–70.
The works of Jesús Rafael Soto and Tara Donovan explore the principle of
modularity through rigorous, optical and vibratory compositions, our perception
of which varies with our point of view. In the same way, the pieces by Monir
Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Laurent Grasso and Heinz Mack capture and reflect
atmospheric light and the fragmented bodies of visitors.
They invite to an exhibition experience that is multidimensional, polysensorial
and temporal.
A major retrospective of Pierre Paulin’s work (curator Cloé Pitiot) will be
organised by the Pompidou Centre from 11 May to 26 August 2016
Press Contacts:
Héloïse Le Carvennec, Head of Press & Communication, heloise@perrotin.com +33 1 42169180
Thomas Chabaud, Press Officer, thomaschabaud@perrotin.com +33 1 76210711
Opening: Thursday 22 October, 4-9pm
Galerie Perrotin
76 rue de Turenne Paris