A series of drawings by Joelle Flumet and a series of animations based on the drawings by Andreas Kressig. Their collaboration is meant to play with the venue’s architecture and its possibilities. Thierry Kuntzig: The Waves, interactive installations. The effect may take its own sweet time but it is gripping. Viewers, facing a screen on which a wave is shown surging forward and breaking, enter a corridor and walk towards the image, irresistibly drawn towards the swelling sea.
Joelle Flumet in collaboration with Andreas Kressig
I would prefer not to. Installations
For the first time, Joelle Flumet will be working with Andreas Kressig. The two
artists have proposed an on-site intervention on the second floor of the Center for
the Contemporary Image. Their collaboration, which involves a series of drawings by
Flumet and a series of animations based on the drawings by Kressig, is meant to play
with the venue’s architecture and its possibilities.
Flumet’s drawings plunge us into an odd domestic universe. At the center of her
strange world lies the object: a mirror, a folding screen, an armchair, a table, a
wall, objects or architectural elements that are functional first and foremost and
whose use, on the face of it, harbors neither secret nor surprise. And yet…
These large-format drawings depict figures in indoor settings which are easily
identified thanks to the stereotypical furnishings (living room, kitchen, office,
and so on). Flumet’s use of the clean-lined vectorial drawing and the broad areas of
saturated color offers a clear-cut view of the situation; surfaces are sharply
delineated while no details clutter up the scene, suggesting restraint and rigor.
Yet this apparent legibility, tinged as it is with a certain decorum, is quickly
disrupted, unexpectedly contradicted by the odd position of the figures or their
strange activity, making us reread with a fresh eye the theoretically harmless
activities in a context that has now become incongruous, and vice versa.
If the situation does become singular it’s because the action taking place there is
decontextualized (people don’t normally practice abseiling while blindfolded and in
an office!). That singularity is at odds with its representation, which is squarely
situated in a generic or typological register. And the opposite holds as well. An
interesting tension arises from this dual movement for it pokes fun at the very idea
of leeway or discrepancy, and inevitably engages the viewer’s critical eye1.
*****
Thierry Kuntzig
The Waves. Interactive installations
The effect may take its own sweet time but it is gripping. Viewers, facing a screen
on which a wave is shown surging forward and breaking, enter a corridor and walk
towards the image, irresistibly drawn towards the swelling sea. Yet the closer they
approach, the clearer it becomes that their own movement affects both the speed of
the wave and the volume of the sound for the swell slows until it freezes into a
black-and-white image while the sound fades to silence. Backing away, viewers then
create the opposite effect.
The change is gradual and follows the pace set by the viewers’ stride, and this
merging generates a certain fascination tinged with joy before a wave that is about
to wash over us but which we control. The device also gives rise to a feeling of
anxiety, the kind we get in a nightmare. Slowing down the image, far from reassuring
us, paradoxically creates an effect of powerlessness.
The paradox in this case articulates a certain relationship to knowledge and
probably to the other in terms of desire and temptation. In a marvelously poetic and
effective way, it puts in play that attraction sparked by knowledge that is elusive,
ungraspable, fleeting.
To suspend time. That tension between movement and stasis which is at work here lies
at the heart of all of Thierry Kuntzel’s art. His installations and videos speak of
obliteration, renewal, coming together, the inexpressible as the limit of images,
disorder. They explore the mechanism of film and motion pictures which the artist
connects with the mechanism of the human psyche.
Corinne de Puckler
Relations publiques / Presse corinne.depuckler@sgg.ch
Opening Wednesday 31 January 2007 starting at 6 pm
Centre pour l’image contemporaine
5, rue du Temple - Geneva