Pauline Bastard.
Too, Jian-Xing
GALERIE EVA HOBER
Many Conceptual artists, such as John Baldessari, who employed sign
painters found in the telephone book, have let their fingers do the
walking. Pauline Bastard, however, brought new meaning to that
yellow-pages slogan with her exhibition "Like Jenga." The
video Les Etats de la matiere--le mur (States of Matter--Wall; all works
2013) shows her nimbly breaking through the wall of an
early-nineteenth-century stone house with her fingers, dislodging stones
by picking away at the crumbling mortar. This house, located in a remote
French village named Saint-Yaguen, was purchased by the artist through
Le Bon Coin, the country's online classifieds. The condition of
sale was that she dismantle the house and remove it; such sales allow
buyers to repurpose the parts for use elsewhere. But instead of taking
the house away with her, Bastard scattered its pieces in the surrounding
area, an undertaking that will be completed in January 2014. Together
with a team of four female assistants, with additional help from two
young men from the region, as well as that of some neighbors, she went
about demolishing and dispersing the house by hand, using only tools
made from materials found on-site.
The video Les Etats de la matiere (States of Matter) presents
carefully composed static shots of the landscape. Rain or shine, the
artist and her team enter and exit the frame to scatter parts of the
house across the terrain. Various-size irregular stones, sand ground
down from stones and mortar, and broken pieces of wood, these materials
now seem to transmute back toward the irregular geometry of their
natural state. The women arrange them with the care of classical Chinese
gardeners arranging scholars' rocks. Yet the compositional
transformations created signal that this work is foremost about the
photographic eye. The handling of the debris as if it were something
fragile is more akin to the process of making stop-motion animation than
to gardening. This is most apparent in the close-up shots of the ground
to which minuscule fragments of the house are delicately added in the
video Les Etats de la matiere--recherche (States of Matter--Research).
Bastard also printed four stills from the videos and, to present them in
the gallery, repurposed three window frames from the house in
Saint-Yaguen as picture frames. A fourth frame was custom-made from a
woodworm-eaten beam. Stones and beams from the house served as benches
for watching her videos, and as a projector stand.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
The three other projects in the show also present procedures for
apprehending a place that ultimately doesn't belong to you. For
Hotel Rooms, in the various hotels where Bastard is put up by art
institutions, the artist videotapes herself in a newly made-up room,
deftly making it look as if someone has since slept in it. Creasing the
sheets and towels, dabbing water and soap around the sink, and planting
hairs and a coin one would imagine had fallen out of a pocket, she
depicts the condition of an occupied room. Replicating the continual
disarrangement of these dreadfully anonymous spaces, Hotel Rooms
oscillates between set dressing and sculptural social realism.
Two works were made during a stay in Los Angeles. For the
photographic series Thinning Out of Leaves, she emptied her suitcase of
all the clothes brought from Paris, discarding jackets, sweaters, and
shoes under urban succulents or swinging them over leafless desert
trees, thus entangling foreign items with local plant life. For the
series "True Stories," Bastard hired writers she found on
Craigs list to concoct tales from small, crummy, often broken objects
she found in the street. One story lends its title to the exhibition.
Like that of a good player of Jenga--a game in which participants take
turns moving a block from a stacked tower to place iron top of that
tower, creating an increasingly unstable structure as the game
progresses--Bastard's touch is light and agile, and she
doesn't repurpose the pieces of the puzzle the way you might expect
her to.