Density of time. The exhibition will be showing, besides various new drawings and bronze sculptures, a space encompassing installation. Two walls enclose an in-between world, in which objects seem to obey unusual physical characteristics and laws. With this work, Trouve' was awarded the Prix Marcel Duchamp, the most important recognition for emerging french artists.
„Time is not suspended but infinitely slowed down.” E. During
Johann König, Berlin is pleased to announce the first solo exhibition of french
artist Tatiana Trouvé , coinciding with the Gallery Weekend opening. Trouvé will be
showing, besides various new drawings and bronze sculptures, a space encompassing
installation. With this work, she was awarded the Prix Marcel Duchamp, the most
important recognition for emerging french artists.
The exhibition „ Density of Time“ adopts the construction principles from the
honored work and transfers as well as expands them within the entire exhibition
space. Two walls enclose an in-between world, in which objects seem to obey unusual
physical characteristics and laws. A pool table and a chair are suspended as they
fall; perspectives open up and elongate into infinity as if the time and space
coordinates had been shifted. Time marks the attempt at a fourth dimension, produced
by the two-dimensionality of the drawings and the three-dimensionality of the
objects installed. Interventions on the gallery walls dilate the space as the
building's foundation penetrates one wall while burnt out air vents blur the limits
between inside and outside, alluding to the hidden presence of a peculiar world.
Trouvé also plays with these intensities in her sculptures, in which the
transformation of matter and form attempt to freeze time. Instead of gas, copper
pipes come out of pressure tanks, a cord's swinging movement is immortalized in
bronze. In the series of drawings „Remanence“, forms disappear into the black paper
background as if swallowed by a black hole. Once again, the passing of time in
space has been disrupted. The place disappears, leaving only its shadow.
Tatiana Trouvé's site-specific constructions of mundane objects, plexiglass, metal,
wood, drawings and sculptures recalls the cold halls of bureaucracy, the fitness
studios, hairdresser salons, cloak rooms or torture chambers. These spaces consist
of architectural modules, which the artist calls 'polders'. In the Netherlands, a
polder denominates an area near the sea protected by dikes from flooding.
Permanently threatened by flood, the protective function of the dike proves quite
deceptive. Trouvé's polder makes reference to the psychoanalytic connotation of this
phenomenon: „ Each polder wins ground within a space, a piece of tangible territory,
which obliges it to show itself as an imaginary figure, a mental space, an
atmosphere or formation of memory“. ( Jens Emil Sennewald)
Tatiana Trouvé (*1968) lives and works in Paris. A retrospective of the artist will
open on the 24th of June, 2008, at the Centre Pompidou in Paris. The works of the
french artist, until now not sufficiently acknowledged in Germany, were to be seen
in the 52nd Biennial in Venice (Arsenale) as well as in the show „Airs de Paris“
curated by Daniel Birnbaum and Christine Marcel in the Centre Pompidou in Paris.
Tatiana Trouvé's work was also shown at solo exhibitions in The Villa Arson in Nice,
the museum Mac/Val in Vitry-sur-Seine and the Palais de Tokyo in Paris last year.
Until now, five monographs on her work have been published.
Opening May 2nd 6 - 9 p.m.
Johann Konig
Dessauer Strasse 6-7 - Berlin
Free admission