Clement Rodzielski; Cardenas Bellanger.
Too, Jian-Xing
Artists like twenty-nine-year-old Clement Rodzielski, who hails
from the French Southwest and went to school in Paris, may signal a new
direction in France today. Their work, which employs methods on hand
consistent with conceptual content, is a welcome break from the fixation
on high production values and the spectacular that was rife among the
previous two generations of French artists. Rodzielski's exhibition
"Grands a" (Big A's) strikingly disarranged Cardenas
Bellanger's space with little more than ink-jet prints on paper,
pre-existing offset-printed items, and MDF panels (all works Untitled,
2008). In his use of recycled images, it is significant that, unlike
American artists Wade Guyton and Kelley Walker, Rodzielski does not fall
back on the traditional support of the canvas nor otherwise try to
emulate painting. Moreover, his choice of pictures here excluded
artistic and scholarly references as well as pop-culture references from
the past or those that are, per se, attention-getting. His clearing out
of all such (even remotely) authoritative devices means that the viewer
has nothing to hang on to but Rodzielski's way of dissecting images.
As can be seen in two altered fashion magazines, the subject
portrayed is peripheral to the logic with which Rodzielski shifts found
images from one state to another in relation to a system of
presentation. In these pieces, after removing the front cover, he
angularly cut and discarded large sections of each successive page, for
about thirty right-hand pages, leaving only a figureless element from
each. Once the still bound magazine is closed, set on a plinth, and
weighted down by a glass plate, its cut pages flatten out into a
horizontal anti-collage.
Similarly, Rodzielski reduces the idea of the diptych to two
successive same-sided pages in a lifestyle magazine, whose ideological
monotony is unmasked by the black holes he cut into it. An angular shape
removed from the center of a homogeneous pair of home-decoration
pictures is filled in from behind by a page spray-painted black. The
images are scanned, blown up, printed by ink jet on paper, and pinned to
MDF panels. One reproduction is directly on the dark ground, whereas the
other is separated by the former picture, a sliver of which peeks out,
letting us deduce that these pages never left the magazine's
binding. They were incised with an X-Acto knife simultaneously and mag
scanned one page after the other. The panels of one diptych hung side by
side, whereas the left panel of the second diptych leaned against the
wall, its right panel sitting atop and overhanging a sizable board set
horizontally on the stairwell railing.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Conceived and executed on site, distinct configurations for hanging
revised the many works in the show. Two identical low-resolution ink-jet
printouts of black curves, for example--according to the artist, the
letter a in a font too big for the large sheet it's printed
on--were spray-painted in a light, mottled, two-tone pattern, then
overlaid with strips of black tape that both transform the composition
and tape it to its support. One version was minimally taped to a wall;
the other, elaborately taped to a huge panel wedged into an odd nook in
the gallery, created a plane not unlike a pivoting hidden door.
"Grands a" could be seen as consisting of two versions of
almost everything, poised to take on a duplicate's limitless
potential.