The Right Man at the Right Place. The artist has decided to present recent works as well as a new version of an animation he originally produced three years ago: "Seven future gifts" is a large-scale sculpture composed of seven concrete ribbons that delineate imaginary gift boxes of different sizes up to 4 x 4 meters.
In 2002, Romanian artist Mircea Cantor had his first exhibition at Yvon
Lambert Paris, entitled The Right Man at the Right Place. Since then, the
artist has gained international recognition with solo and group exhibitions
worldwide.
The gallery is proud to welcome Cantor's work for the second time in Paris.
The show follows a travelling exhibition of the artist¹s work in Great
Britain that has received wide acclaim as one of the most thrilling this
year. The show began at Modern Art Oxford, travelled to Arnolfini
Bristol and concluded at Camden Arts Centre in London.
For his Parisian show, Mircea Cantor has decided to present recent works as
well as a new version of an animation he originally produced three years
ago:
Seven future gifts is a large-scale sculpture composed of seven concrete
ribbons that delineate imaginary gift boxes of different sizes up to 4 x 4
meters. The work cleverly employs post-minimal and post-pop vocabulary.
Easy is a series of drawings that are presented as a storyboard. The work is
laid out in the style of a comic strip; each drawing constructs the story of
two fingers jumping freely over a paper wall. The artist introduces another
dimension in this work. The drawings were made by a professional cartoonist,
and Cantor employs them as ready-mades. The hand of the artist is removed,
and so the production process is typical of globalization. Thus Cantor
reconsiders the principle of craftsmanship and questions the notion of free
artistic exploration.
Zooooooom is an animated movie that features fictional characters walking
towards an unfinished pyramid-shaped building. Once the characters reach the
edifice, they start dismantling it stone by stone. In the end, the viewer's
perspective zooms out which amplifies the fictional aspect giving the viewer
the feeling he is being manipulated. The viewer increasingly understands
that the theme of the piece is deconstruction. In fact, Zooooooom is
based on a script that secretly tells the story of a one-dollar bill. The
economic reference is a metaphor for the fragility of Western values.
With The New Times, like with an earlier work by Cantor titled Les Mondes,
the artist symbolically suggests a famous newspaper. Somewhat paradoxically,
here it is an addition that completes the work, whereas with Les Mondes it
was a subtraction.
Io is a diptych of photos that feature a tunnel entrance and exit. It is
impossible for the viewer to tell which is which; the eye is therefore
mislead in a timeless frame and forced to choose without direction.
Response is an installation composed of rows of corncobs that each have a
letter written on them by the absence of kernals. Together the corn cobs
spell out what should we do with the pearls? This question is in fact a
take on a phrase that Saint Mattheiu said, don't throw your pearls in front
of pigs, which means wasting something by giving it to a person who will
not use it correctly.
All of Cantor's works on view form a coherent whole supported by explicit
and implicit links with transgressive ideas, potentially hidden from the
possibility of transcending obstacles non different levels of perception,
but also from apprehension and from hopes that are obscured by the ambiguity
of space-time.
The generic title of the exhibition, White sugar for black days, is in the
same spirit, a manner of highlighting paradoxical situations through
language.
Musical performance by Alain Kremski with sacred Buddhist bowls of Japan.
Thursday, March 26th; Friday, March 27th; and Saturday, March 28th at 6:00
pm.
Contact : Mélanie Meffrer Rondeau / melanie@yvon-lambert.com / +33 142 710 933
Opening reception on March 14
Yvon Lambert
108 rue vieille du Temple - Paris
Free admission