For his first one-person exhibition in the U.S., Fabrice Gygi, a European shooting star transformed the Swiss Institute’s gallery space into a polling station. Fabrice Gygi conceives his works in the same way that a dealer in illegal goods displays his objects in the street.
For his first one-person exhibition in the U.S., Fabrice Gygi, a European shooting star transformed the Swiss Institute’s gallery space into a polling station. Fabrice Gygi conceives his works in the same way that a dealer in illegal goods displays his objects in the street. He needs a mobile structure that can vanish in the wink of an eye and reappear just as quickly elsewhere. Not seen, not captured, but
always there. A structure too heavy, too static, and he is dead, he disappears.
As in his first exhibitions, Fabrice Gygi still works with canvas tarpaulins, fitted pipes,
inflatable modules, and wire mesh. He utilizes, for example : protective mattresses,
which he attaches around columns or along handrails ; tents for covering a tribunal ;
sand bags placed at the entrance to a museum ; fences made of tarpaulins that form a
barrier.
Besides the elaboration of a remarkably coherent plastic language, the great force of
Fabrice Gygi’s work resides in an ambiguity never quite resolved in his proposals. Is a
podium made of grey-green canvas and wood designed for the use of wealthy generals,
who have at their disposal a little sentry box hastily constructed for viewing a march of
troops in the Valais Alps ? Or is it perhaps a mobile space for surveillance, where
those same generals, taken prisoner by guerrillas, are being "exhibited" before entering
the tent-tribunal ? But who decides : a representative of authority or of the resistance ?
Is this before or after the coup d’état ?
The work shown at SI: a kit for voting with booth, ballot box, crowd barriers, benches,
notice boards, flagpole, etc., shares the same ambiguity. For whom are we going to
vote? Is there really a choice? Is it just an installation to please the media, as the die
is already cast. Or is this kit a standard model of what should be a fair voting?
Anyway, it's hard to decide. This state of indecisiveness makes such a work not
pleasant at all, not friendly-user or relation oriented. Fabrice Gygi doesn't care.
Attempts have been made to define art by its capacity to generate exchange, to
“inhabit†the everyday, to forge links between different segments of reality. Certainly,
much of today’s art tastes “real†but, just as Canada Dry is not whiskey, so art is not
reality. Or rather art, which is always furtive, constitutes a parallel reality. Artists like
Gygi are not obsessed with organizing neighborly, even fruitful relations between these
two realities. Never there where you expect them, they are constantly developing
transfer movements, activating energy vectors and the constant oscillations that
undermine our systems of interpretation.MOW
Co-production: Fonds cantonal de décoration et d’art visuel, Geneva
Lounge
Tony Matelli
Small works
We all try to keep up appearances. We all operate within certain conventions, but we
can’t control everything. Sometimes we smell and look like shit. Gas gets passed and
pimples unexpectedly come. We can accept all of these things so long as they are
maintained.
Once maintenance ends, subversion begins. TM
Courtesy: Gallery Leo Koenig, New York
Opening reception: Thursday, May 31, 6-8 PM
Swiss Institute - Contemporary Art - 495 Broadway 3rd floor - New York NY 10012
t: 212 925 2035 / f: 212 925 2040