The exposition focuses on several short movies of the French director Francois Ozon. This filmmaker is intrigued by the various ways in which a breach occurs in someone's personal life, and an alternative lifestyle evolves making a transforming moment (of the protagonists) possible. Curated by Krist Gruijthuijsen.
curated by Krist Gruijthuijsen
Marres, Centre for Contemporary Culture in Maastricht, shows from 9 July
onwards the exhibition Curtain Raiser. The exposition focuses on several
short movies of the French director Francois Ozon. Curtain Raiser is
curated by Krist Gruijthuijsen and reacts on the present presentation
about the Flâneur: À l'exterieur. Rites de Passage. Both
exhibitions will be on show until 28 September. In the middle of the
nineteenth century, the flâneur occupied an exploratory position in Paris
city life, implying a new bond with the dynamics, the uniformity and the
anonymity of modern city life. Charles Baudelaire examined this
phenomenon, characterising the flâneur as a distant and observing figure
peculiar to urban culture, yet one who simultaneously abandoned himself to
experiencing and reflecting on city life.
Entitled Curtain Raiser, the
focus here is on this double relationship, only this time round with the
help of work by French director Francois Ozon. This filmmaker is intrigued
by the various ways in which a breach occurs in someone's personal life,
and an alternative lifestyle evolves making a transforming moment (of the
protagonists) possible. In Ozon's work, this transformation is the result
of an obsessive longing, often leading to a renewed idea of one's own
identity. Curtain Raiser focuses on the short films Ozon made in the
early years of his career. They are of great artistic value and can be
regarded both as cinema and as visual art. The exhibition is now
displaying these original cinematographic works at an art institute and in
combination with Rites de Passage. These contextual changes provide
opportunities for reinterpreting Ozon's films in various ways.
opening july 9, 2008
Marres
Capucijnenstraat 98 - Maastricht
Open Wednesday-Sunday 12 - 5 pm