The two shows explores different types of revelation: Nuits blanches by Calgary artist Derek Besant and Chambres noires by Quebec photographer Michel Campeau. A hybrid soundtrack, an intriguing mix of music, noise, and stories, immerses the visitor in an open-ended narrative. Comprising some 30 photos taken between 2005 and 2009, Chambres noires is the composite portrait of that endangered place of revelation, the darkroom.
Curator: Catherine Bédard
As part of the Semaine des Cultures Etrangères and Nuit Blanche, the
Canadian Cultural Centre presents two exhibitions exploring different
types of revelation: Nuits blanches by Calgary artist Derek Besant and
Chambres noires by Quebec photographer Michel Campeau.
Derek Besant’s installation Nuits blanches plunges the viewer into a
mysterious realm in which floating images – empty motel rooms that
look like crime scenes – become surfaces on which fantasies may be
projected. Paradoxically, Chambres noires takes us into the now obsolete
secret closed spaces of the photo lab, where images used to be revealed
in the dark.
Derek Besant: Nuits blanches
Nuits Blanches invites us to experience a particular aspect – more
cinematic than photogenic – of the vast Canadian landscape, the neverending journeys and impersonal service stations along the deserted
roads taken to cross the country from east to west. It is a metaphorical
and lonely night journey, a road movie that leads us to from one motel
room to another, with their unmade beds, silent witnesses to restless
nights serving as a frame for the narrative. A hybrid soundtrack, an
intriguing mix of music, noise, and stories, immerses the visitor in an
open-ended narrative.
Besant’s restless nights are in fact darkrooms, “negative” images in the
luminous sense of the word, stripped of any distinctive features and
inhabited by lines. Outlines innervating a ghost; blurrier lines that only
reveal folds and creases. Made up of large photographic canvases
printed in thermal ink using a high-tech process, the Nuits blanches
exhibition is taken from the 15 Restless Nights series first exhibited in 2006
on the occasion of the thirtieth anniversary of the Harbourfront Centre
in Toronto. The series has travelled across Canada and Eastern Europe.
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Michel Campeau: Chambres noires
Comprising some thirty colour photographs taken between 2005 and
2009, Chambres noires is the composite portrait of that endangered
place of revelation, the darkroom. Fragments of darkrooms visited in
Vietnam, Niger, Mexico, Cuba, Canada, Germany, Belgium and France,
the images are both intimate and transnational. Without the slightest
hint of nostalgia and without ceding to the temptation of producing a
photogenic image of the private place with restricted access shielded
from the light, Campeau photographs the artist’s equipment and clutter,
the context of his work in which instruments and techniques, as well
as the traces of experiments, no longer serve to reveal an image but
themselves become the subject of the image. Transmitted in pieces
borrowed from various cultures and territories, exclusively seen from
close up which makes seeing the big picture impossible and refers to
a subjective individual presence, the very idea of the darkroom is thus
not really revealed, or really objectified, and retains an extraordinary
imaginary power.
This series was the subject of an important monograph, Darkroom,
published in 2007 by Nazraeli Press (United States) in the collection
edited by Martin Parr; it was also the subject of a special report in New
York-based magazine Aperture. Being shown for the first time in Paris, the
series was first exhibited at the Rencontres d’Arles in 2010, then at the
Château d’Eau in Toulouse and, this summer, at the Musée Nicéphore
Niepce in Chalon-sur-Saône.
Derek Besant lives in Calgary. His multimedia works explore the
themes of sleep, immersion, migration, absence and underlying
narratives. They often feature a sonic element, and many of them were
produced in collaboration with writers. In association with one of the
biggest Canadian outdoor advertising agencies, the Pattison Outdoor
Group, which uses state-of-the-art technology, Derek Besant made
a name for himself the international scene with monumental public
installations presented in several cities. Besant represented Canada at
several international biennials, including London, Cracow, Liège, Tallinn,
Barcelona, Rome and Tokyo. His work, which has been exhibited around
the world, has won international prizes, including in Novosibirsk, Los
Angeles, London and Györ.
Michel Campeau lives in Montreal. His work stretches out over the
last four decades of contemporary photography. Expressing a concern
for interiorization at odds with the medium and breaking with the
formal conventions of documentary, Campeau explores the subjective,
narrative and ontological dimensions of photography. His work has
been exhibited at New Typologies, New York Photo Festival, Brooklyn, in
2008 and at the Rencontres d’Arles in 2010. Recent major solo exhibitions
include the retrospective Eloquent Images: Photographs, 1971–1996 organized by the Canadian Museum of Contemporary Photography
in Ottawa. In 1994 Michel Campeau won the Higashikawa Overseas
Photographer Award (Japan). He received the Duke and Duchess of York
Prize awarded by the Canada Council for the Arts.
The exhibition Chambres noires is organized in partnership with the Galerie Simon Blais (Montréal), the Centre National des Arts Plastiques and with the support of Rencontres d’Arles.
Press Contact:
Jean Baptiste Le Bescam +33 (0)1 44432148 jean-baptiste.lebescam@international.gc.ca
Opening September 25, 6 - 8:30 p.m.
Canadian Cultural Centre
5, rue de Constantine - 75007 Paris
Opening Hours:
Free access from Monday to Friday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Thursday until 7 p.m.