"Les Feuilles": Super/Palais De Tokyo.
Too, Jian-Xing
"Les Feuilles" (Sheets) took place at two sites. Works by
Barbara Bloom, Robert Breer, Isabelle Cornaro, Aurelien Froment, Ryan
Gander, Benoit Maire, Clement Rodzielski, and Raphael Zarka were
presented at Super, an artist-run space that opened last year, while
works by these same artists plus Julien Crepieux, Mark Geffriaud, and
Jiri Kolar were shown at Module 2 of the Palais de Tokyo. Curated by
Elodie Royer and Yoann Gourmel, "Les Feuilles" mainly included
artists in their late twenties and early thirties but, holding to a
convergence of artistic approaches rather than claiming inheritance, it
also included three artists from different generations: Bloom, Breer,
and Kolar, the last a onetime Paris-based Czech artist born in 1914.
Hung with precision, the exhibition's unforced formal, conceptual,
and poetic overlaps tested out what a group show can gain in the absence
of a theme, tagline, or contrived scenography.
At the Palais de Tokyo, Breer's nearly--but deliberately
not--geometric paintings Untitled, 1950, and Untitled, 1953, have a
glimmer of cartooniness that hints at his abstract animations to come,
while Cornaro's photographic suite Cinesculptures, 2008, has
something of stop-motion magic to it: Seeking the threshold of
visibility within a fixed frame, Cornaro photographed two sheets of
paper, one folded horizontally and one vertically, on a black ground.
With each subsequent photograph, a new parallel fold appears and an
additional plane is created but, by the sixth image, planes start to
vanish from sight, swallowed up by shadow and perspective. Kolar's
collage Deposition du temoin inconnu (Testimony of the Unknown Witness),
1984, features text that has been finely fragmented into illegibility but keeps just enough of it intact to show that it must have come from a
single printed source. With its two jagged shapes cut out to frame
mirrors, it looked remarkably current alongside Rodzielski's
shardlike, glueless collages made from successive pages of women's
magazines still in their binding (Untitled, 2008). At Super, Gander
evoked different means of distribution with just three identical, blank
A1 sheets of paper (The Mechanics of Form, 2002). The first curls
slightly as if it had been protected in a tube and were something to be
sold; the second has creases from being folded in eighths, a suitable
form to hand out or mail; and the third has creases from being folded in
fourths, and staple holes along the vertical fold, suggesting a poster
that comes in a magazine. These surprisingly decipherable proportions
were a foil to the closed copy of a French edition of De Divina
Proportione in Zarka's Prefiguration de la collection des rhombis
(Prefiguration of the Rhombi Collection), 2008, which presents the
famous Renaissance treatise on geometry and artistic proportions as a
display base for two utilitarian screw-threaded metal
rhombicuboctahedrons.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
But what was unusual about "Les Feuilles" was how certain
pieces conjured works from the other site. Looking at Gander's
folded sheets at Super, for example, one had to think of Cornaro's
folded sheets at the Palais de Tokyo. It is as if one were obliged to
verify whether the record had skipped or if discontinuity was part of
the score. That works could withstand being superposed onto seemingly
similar pieces by other artists and come out as quite distinct stops you
in your tracks. Shedding facile formal or anecdotal pairings, this
exhibition's carefully orchestrated false starts are the most
palpable indication that its curators took their cue from Sergei
Parajanov's film Sayat Nova (1968) and Serge Daney's 1982
article on it, in which he observes, "... [O]ne image does not
follow another; rather it replaces it."