Sylvia Beder communicationculture
With the ''Fluorescence(s)' exhibition, Ilan Engel is creating a resonance between the works of Arnaud de Gramont and those of conceptual artist Eric Michel, who also toys with the boundary between the material and the immaterial.
"Every man in his night goes to his light"
Victor Hugo, excerpt from Les Contemplations
From 8 September to 22 October 2011, Ilan Engel Gallery will be showing Arnaud de
Gramont's photos for the first time, alongside works by Eric Michel in an exhibition entitled
"Fluorescence(s)". Ilan Engel will also offer this contrast at his stand at the Slick Art Fair from
20 to 23 October 2011.
After working 15 years as an architect, Arnaud de Gramont (born in 1960) became a photographer in
2003. Frédérique Destribats explains: "From his architectural practice, Arnaud developed this deep
attraction for both spaces and the light that fashions and sculpts them. He simply changed
perspective. The subject matter still consists of spaces, volumes, lines and curves, and
materials, but now through the lens of a camera". Arnaud de Gramont adds: "I am fascinated by
light, hence these numerous urban photos of electric light sources: lamps, neon lights, signs,
halos".
Light as structure
It was in that frame of mind that he made his
first series of night photos. In his nighttime
wanderings, instinctively drawn to the raw neon
light, Arnaud focuses on a portion of space,
and shapes and colours pop out from black
backgrounds as if they were floating. "For that
reason I really like David Lynch's
cinematography, his unique way of navigating
through places and dimensions whose nature
the viewer cannot truly discern. Photography
can also capture this type of emotion".
Arnaud de Gramont has done several series in Brussels, London, Paris, New York, Seattle, and
Berlin, not to mention Chicago. But there is no clue to identify the cities where these photos were
taken, photos that tend toward abstraction and allow each individual's imagination to run wild.
After years spent deconstructing and reconstructing the spaces entrusted to him, Arnaud de
Gramont is left with only light, the lines and effusion of which structure his images. "When light is
forced, he explains, it creates a glare that dilutes and erases material, and overexposed objects
become less perceptible and can even become dirty".
In a silent confrontation, Arnaud de Gramont puts the real at a distance, which he portrays as
"dematerialized material" through the action of artificial light. He leads us "to question our own
perception of spaces, volumes, lights, and colours. To seize the moment or space in the
camera's lens does not mean to freeze it, but rather to give it another scale of time and space that
forces us to take a different look", comments Frédérique Destribats. And through this perceptual
prism that touches on the essential, ultimately he relates to the observer's inwardness. The palpable
gives way to the impalpable...
With the "Fluorescence(s)" exhibition, Ilan Engel is creating a resonance between the works of
Arnaud de Gramont and those of conceptual artist Eric Michel, who also toys with the boundary
between the material and the immaterial. A captivating dialogue which can be found at the Ilan Engel
Gallery stand at the Slick Art Fair.
Opening 8 September 2011
Ilan Engel Gallery
77, rue des Archives +33/0 - Paris
Hours: Tue-Sat 14-19
free admission