The First Art Newspaper on the Net Established in 1996 United States Tuesday, May 21, 2013
 
First Large-scale Presentation of Philippe Parreno's Work in France Since 2002 at Centre Pompidou
View of the exhibition. © Jean-Claude Planchet, Centre Pompidou, 2009.
PARIS.- Offered a retrospective by the Centre Pompidou, Philippe Parreno has come up with a “journey through time,” a re-reading of the artist’s work by the artist himself that is articulated through three elements: the exhibition proper, the accompanying series of special events for young people, and the substantial catalogue.

The first large-scale presentation of the artist’s work in France since 2002, this is also a component of a wider project, being one of a number of concurrent exhibitions that Parreno is staging at leading international venues: the Kunsthalle, Zurich, the Irish Museum of Modern Art, Dublin, and Bard College, NY.

The exhibition will occupy the Galerie Sud, a 1,200 m2 glass-walled space that is both full of light and integrally related to the city outside. Exploiting these features, Parreno avoids the use of internal partitions, the exhibition design being inspired by the notion of contextuality. Exhibited works and other events are organised around the projection on a vast screen of a 70mm film.

Parreno clearly doesn’t see his retrospective as a simple accumulation of emblematic pieces. This is why he insists on the idea of a “journey through time,” hinging on key dates related to his work and development, among them 1968, the year of Robert Kennedy’s death; 1977, the opening of the Centre Pompidou; and 1993, the year of the artist’s own Speech Bubbles.

Seeking as ever to escape the confinement of the gallery’s four walls, Parreno will invite young visitors to develop a series of children’s performances inspired by his past works. Every morning during the first month, primaryschool children and teenagers will present animations developed in workshops with the artist: a project entirely in accord with the Centre’s commitment, since its very beginnings, to promoting young people’s engagement with art.

To accompany the exhibition, two books are to be published by Editions du Centre Pompidou. PARRENO is a comprehensive and plentifully illustrated survey catalogue, including critical essays and the first complete list of the artist’s works from 1989 to 2008, while Parade? is a children’s tale written by Parreno and illustrated by Johan Olander.

Visitors are welcomed by a large light sculpture specially made for the occasion that hangs above the entrance to the exhibition. Inspired by the marquee of the old American movie house, it advertises a film programme. And like the other elements of the exhibition, it is linked to a synchroniser that orchestrates the succession of events.

On entering the exhibition space, one finds a new, red, version of Parreno’s Speech Bubbles (White) of 1997 - an installation of helium balloons in the form of wordless speech bubbles. Every ten minutes, the whole space is plunged into shadow by a system of automated curtains, these conditions offering an opportunity to discover a whole range of works, among them a 70mm film with its hyperrealist image. Parreno also modulates the light within the space by working with shadows. A transparent projection booth in glass appears as an outgrowth of the glazing designed by architects Piano and Rogers.

Finally, the exhibition will also host a number of regular events. A Christmas tree in cast aluminium, entitled Fraught Time, serves as the inspiration for performances by teenagers, with music specially written by London group The Monroe Transfer. Every morning between 11 and mid-day during the first month of the exhibition, Parreno’s No More Reality (suite et fin) of 1993 offers children an opportunity to make shadow theatre using marionettes based on posters of masterpieces of modern art, from Renoir to Matisse. And puppets based on New York illustrator Johan Olander’s monsters for Parreno’s Parade? - a children’s book published to go with the exhibition - will be used for a once-weekly event for primary school children.

From the very beginning, Philippe Parreno has worked collaboratively, first with a group of fellow-artists that started with Pierre Joseph and Bernard Joisten and later came to include Dominique Gonzalez-Foerster and Philippe Perrin. His work continues to revolve around a collaborative multivocality that draws on a wide range of sources, from John Cage to Mikhail Bakhtin.

The works themselves manifest the same commitment to interaction, as for example Sac Ozone (1988), filled with objects to be handled by the public — Parreno has always seen the exhibition as a space of freedom, community and play. It was against this background that in the early ‘90s there emerged the beginnings of a more personal body of work, with the No More Reality project, launched with a video of children demonstrating in a school playground, chanting the slogan of the title. The artist’s reflection on the exhibition as medium, already evident in the earlier collective works, then developed more decisively, leading to Snow Dancing, 1995. This work consists of three elements, one of them a book of the same title that describes an event. This event, a party-like series of micro-events in a single venue, then took place, just as described, at the Consortium, Dijon. The event, in turn, was followed by the opening, which revealed only the traces of its past future. Here, fiction became reality, to the point of being indistinguishable from it.

The early years of this decade saw the conceptual aspect of the work come to the fore, while Parreno’s imaginary became dominated, more than ever, by the themes of the ghostly and of the “hollow” subject. Questions of authorship, of collective creation, of copyright and copyshare were returned to in what are today the artist’s best-known works: Ann Lee (the Japanese manga character bought with Pierre Huyghe who figured in a number of works before her retirement in 2002), Crédits… (a film of 2000, whose full title is the list of the 17 people who worked on it) and Bryannnnnn Ferryyyyyy (a film of 2004, on the law and practice of copyright, made with Liam Gillick). Reflection on the time of the exhibition found expression in Alien Seasons at the Musée d’Art Moderne de la Ville de Paris, in 2002, where the appearance of a cuttlefish in a video triggered the other works. The theme of the ghostly made a return after Ann Lee, with works in fluorescent ink visible only in the dark, disappearing in the light (Fade Away). And in the film El Sueño de una Cosa (2001, MNAM), Parreno conceives of different versions of the same work, which varies in each instantiation, exploring different contexts of presentation, from the cinema to the museum, displacing and remixing his own work.

Parreno gained much acclaim in 2006 for the film Zidane: A 21st Century Portrait, made with Douglas Gordon. In this installation-cum-commercial release the two artists sought to capture presence in the moment, articulating a reflection on time that puts into question its very reality. The series of blank Marquees suggests that exhibitions be experienced in cinematic time, while Il Tempo del Postino, a collaborative performance at the Manchester Opera House, takes Parreno’s exploration of exhibition one step further in “delivering” art in a new way, in a new space.

Centre Pompidou | Philippe Parreno | Kunsthalle | Zurich | Irish Museum of Modern Art | Dublin | Bard College | Robert Kennedy | Johan Olander |


Last Week News

June 3, 2009

PHotoEspaña 2009: Festival of Photography Offers 74 Exhibitions at Twelfth Edition

Tate Britain Shows First Survey in London for Eighteen Years of the Work of Richard Long

Duchamp, Miró, Marc, Monet and Picasso Highlight Christie's Auction of Impressionist and Modern Art

Museum für Moderne Kunst Frankfurt Showcases Comprehensive Solo Sarah Morris Exhibition

Arriving at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection: A Gothic Tower by Artist Wim Delvoye

Mark Lewis Represents Canada with Four New Films at the 53rd International Art Exhibition

Loan Exhibition of Major American Impressionist and Realist Paintings Opens at Queensland Art Gallery

A Collection of Color Plate Books, Maps, Atlases, Watercolors and Paintings will be Offered at Sotheby's

MoMA to Present the First Major U.S. Retrospective of Ron Arad's Work

Internationally Renowned Architect Glenn Murcutt Honoured at Museum of Sydney

Susan Kleinberg Mounts Installation at Telecom Italia Future Center for the Venice Biennale

Design Museum Celebrates Visionary Design from London's Creative Mavericks

New York Academy of Art Opens its Summer Exhibition 2009 Juried by Eric Fischl, Matthew Flowers and Anne Strauss

First Solo Museum Show Devoted to Katharina Fritsch' s Work Opens in Zurich

Crystal Bridges Expands Public Programs Team

Pierre-Marie Giraud will Present Some Sixty Original Contemporary Ceramic Pieces in Basel

Roxy Paine Makes New "Dendroid" for National Gallery of Art; Slated for Fall 2009 Installation in Sculpture Garden

"Artful Animals" Exhibition Opens July 1 at the National Museum of African Art

Heart of Houston's Museum District To Be Transformed This Week With a Public Art Installation

Cultural Artifacts Returned to Anguilla by the Federal Bureau of Investigation

June 2, 2009

New Magritte Museum Houses the Largest Collection of Magritte Works in the World

Portraits, Pastels, Prints: Whistler in The Frick Collection

Churchill, Kirchener...and Lilly Allen: The Stories Behind the Faces of Gallery's New Campaign

Maison Rouge in Paris Opens VRAOUM! An Exhibition of Comic Strips and Contemporary Art

Fifteen Years of Collecting at the Kunstmuseum Wolfsburg - Against the Grain

Artist Duo Elmgreen & Dragset Stage the Danish and Nordic Pavilions for La Biennale di Venezia

PHotoEspaña 2009: First Individual Exhibition in Spain of Brazilian Photographer Mauro Restiffe

Kunstverein Hannover Examines Oppositions & Dialogues in Contemporary Art

Sotheby's To Offer the Very Best of Decorative Arts - Furniture, Silver, Ceramics, Glass & Clocks

ICE Seizes a Cultural Artifact Reported Stolen in Italy Almost 12 Years Ago

Montreal Museum of Fine Arts Announces it will Show J.W. Waterhouse The Modern Pre-Raphaelite this Fall

Paintings, Assemblages and Sculptures by Clay Ketter Prsented at Moderna Museet

Deborah Grant's Long-term Project Bacon, Egg, Toast in Lard Opens at Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive

Point of Intersection: Young Art and Masterpieces on View at the Lentos Kunstmuseum in Linz

Rarely Seen Medieval Drawings on View in New Exhibition at Metropolitan Museum

Dallas Museum of Art Announces New Officers and Trustees

First Ever Exhibition to Examine an Intriguing but Relatively Unappreciated Aspect of Medals of Dishonour

Smithsonian American Art Museum Announces 2009-2010 Fellowship Appointments

The Akron Art Museum Introduces New Book Club

Chihuly Unveiled: A Celebration at the Flint Institute of Arts

June 1, 2009

Carla Bruni Photograph Taken by Pamela Hanson to be Sold at Villa Grisebach Auktionen

Painting with Connections to Captain Cook Bought for Captain Cook Memorial Museum

Schirn Kunsthalle Addresses the Complex World of Contemporary Art in "The Making of Art"

The Dallas Museum of Art Presents a New Way for Visitors to Experience the Museum's Collections

Walters Art Museum Announces the Temporary Closing of Some 19th-Century Galleries

PHotoEspaña 2009: BBVA Opens Exhibition of Photographs Made by Italian Ugo Mulas

Colour Chart: Reinventing Colour, 1950 to Today Opens at Tate Liverpool

New Salvador Dali Exhibition at Chateau de Pommard in Bourgogne, France

Comprehensive Examination of Herbert Tobias' Entire Oeuvre at Deichtorhallen

East Meets West in Tyler Museum of Art's Summer Exhibition Fashioning Kimono

Dance of Colours: Nijinsky's Eye and Abstraction on View at Hamburger Kunsthalle

Kunsthalle Düsseldorf Continues the Young Exhibition Series with Compilation IV

Rumble: Groundbreaking First Annual Contemporary Art Fair in Santa Barbara

Artium Presents First In-depth Review of the Birth and Development of Experimental Poetry in Spain

The Zimmerli Art Museum Presents Japanese-Inspired Work from its Permanent Collection

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Opens Vida y Drama: Modern Mexican Prints

London-based Art and Design Practice, United Visual Artists, to Show Large-scale Light-based Installations

Public Art Event Celebrating Los Angeles-area Artists will be Displayed in Downtown Los Angeles in July

First Person Arts Goes Nationwide To Find The Best "In These Hard Times" Stories

Everson Unveils New Website Upgrades in Preparation for Fall Exhibition

Discovery Center of Idaho Opens Newest Exhibition "Good Vibration" on June 12th

May 31, 2009

Fondation Beyeler Opens Exhibition Including Works by Alberto Giacometti and His Family

Stanley William Hayter's Surrealist and Abstract Prints on View at the National Gallery of Art

Seventy-five of the Most Prestigious Galleries in Paris will Open for an Exceptional Evening

Eames-inspired Mobile by Martin Boyce Acquired for Leeds Art Gallery with Help from The Art Fund

Sea Lovers will Delight in Yale Center for British Art Exhibition of Marine Paintings

Arts Organizations Across the UK Win Funding to Develop Leaders of Tomorrow

Guggenheim in Venice Celebrates the Memory of Robert Rauschenberg with Exhibition

First Presentation of the Batliner Collection at Albertina in Vienna

PHotoEspaña 2009: Matadero Madrid Shows Video Installation Made by Íñigo Manglano-Ovalle

First Sundays for Families Down by the River: Unveiling the Museum Reach

Everson Museum of Art Announces 2009 Recipient of Everson Medal

Then & Now: An Exhibition of Selections from the Utah Museum of Fine Arts' Permanent Collection

Viva Mexico! Edward Weston and his Contemporaries Exhibition Opens in Boston

Vancouver Art Gallery the Only North American Museum to Present Exhibition by German Photographer Andreas Gursky

First Major Retrospective for Aldwyth Opens at the Ackland Art Museum

Denver Art Museum Presents Charles M. Russell Retrospective, Opening in October

The Feelies to Kick Off a Series of Indie-Rock Concerts and Special Events at the Whitney

Famed Painter Chuck Close Named 2009 Aspen Institute Harman-Eisner Artist in Residence

Christie's New York to Offer Five Centuries of Botanical Books in June

Dia Art Foundation Presents a Series of Outdoor Events at the Hispanic Society of America's Audubon Terrace

Students Convey Their Perceptions and Ideas About Their Neighborhoods at Dallas Museum of Art Exhibition

Philbrook Museum of Art Trades Tulips for Tomatoes

Columbia Museum of Art Announces New Board Members at Annual Meeting

May 30, 2009

Peter Zumthor of Switzerland Awarded the 2009 Pritzker Architecture Prize in Buenos Aires

Batman in Barcelona: Dragon's Knight Showcases the Caped Crusader in a Different Type of Gotham

Massachusetts Judge Rules In Favor of Museum of Fine Arts, Boston Regarding Kokoschka Work

Paolo Veronese and The Petrobelli Altarpiece a The National Gallery of Canada

San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Presents Georgia O'Keeffe and Ansel Adams

Future Depends On You. New Rules at Moscow Museum of Modern Art

New Virginia Steele Scott Galleries of American Art Opens Today

San Jose ICA Presents NextNew Exhibition - Summer Show Features Best of the New with a Twist of Green

California in Relief: A History in Wood and Linocut Prints at Hearst Art Gallery

Major Retrospective of the Work of Walker Evans Opens at Fotomuseum Winterthur

The Cartoons of John T. McCutcheon: Chronicles of A Changing World

Philanthropists Donald and Beth Sobey Make An Additional Gift For Research

The Franklin Asks -- Race: Are We So Different?

Hammering the Void - Gazira Babeli, Second Life

Northern Print Biennale 2009: Shortlist Announced

Philadelphia Sculptors and The Galleries at Moore Present Works by Students from Five Area Art and Design Schools

NGBK Presents: Call for Submissions - Public Art Competition in Berlin

Shalinee Kumari: American Debut To Open at Frey Norris Gallery

Call for Applications CuratorLab - International Curatorial Program

May 29, 2009

Christie's New York Latin American Art Evening Sale Realizes $11 Million Tonight

From Raphael to Carracci: The Art of Papal Rome Opens at the National Gallery of Canada

Van Gogh Museum Acquires Painting by Pierre Bonnard

Sotheby's Spring 2009 Latin American Art Sale Totals $9,422,625

Quadricentennial Celebration of the Hudson River Valley at Frances Lehman Loeb Art Center

PHotoEspaña 2009: Exhibit Hall Channel of Isabel II Presents Sergey Bratkov (Glory Days)

Focus on Color: The Photography of Jeannette Klute at The Bruce Museum

ICE Recovers Egyptian Artifacts Stolen From a Museum in the Netherlands

Fuller Craft Museum Names Wyona Lynch-McWhite Exective Director

Colorado River Photographs By Karen Halverson Explored in New Exhibition Space

Dallas Museum of Art Appoints Jeffrey Grove as New Curator of Contemporary Art

Panel Discussion with Museum Reach Artists Commissioned by San Antonio River Foundation

Haughtons' Legendary 'International Fair' Celebrates 21 Spectacular Years in New York

Le Ciel Regarde la Terre - Artist: Philippe Pastor

Glass Stress - Collateral Event of the 53rd International Art Exhibition - La Biennale di Venezia

Kunsthaus Baselland Presents Javier Téllez, Michael Bauer and Hagar Schmidhalter

Smart Light Sydney On View At Customs House

San Francisco Art Institute Presents Sanctuary City/Ciudad Santuario

Contemporary Craft Market Flourishes at Collect 2009

Most Popular Last Seven Days



1.- Mexican archaeologists study cave paintings found in the northeast part of Argentina

2.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

3.- Top of the bill: Giant rubber duck by Dutch artist Florentijn Hofman sails into Hong Kong

4.- Researchers say first permanent English settlers in America resorted to cannibalism

5.- Russia's great museums feud over revival plan of Moscow museum of Western art

6.- Dartmouth's Hood Museum appoints first African Art Curator

7.- Survey exhibition of American artist Ellen Gallagher's work opens at Tate Modern

8.- Exhibition of nude photography around 1900 on view at Berlin's Photography Museum

9.- Paris Photo Los Angeles concludes a successful first edition with over 13,500 visitors

10.- Excavation unearths evidence of Thessaloniki's urban life between 4th and 9th centuries AD

Related Stories



Centre Pompidou Foundation appoints Sylvia Chivaratanond as the first Adjunct Curator of American Art

Ronan & Erwan Bouroullec: Bivouac open exhibition at the Centre Pompidou-Metz

Jeff Koons Releases Design Concept for BMW Art Car to be Presented at Centre Pompidou

Centre Pompidou Shows Fifty Large-Format Paintings in Tribute to Lucian Freud

First Solo Exhibition in a Major European Institution for Jim Hodges

Pompidou Celebrates Pierre Soulages, Indisputably the Greatest Living French Painter

Centre Pompidou Announces Five Week Festival of Artistic Encounters

Centre Pompidou Presents Marcel Duchamp Prize 2008 Winner: Laurent Grasso's The Horn Perspective

Centre Pompidou Dedicates Exhibition to Women: elles@centrepompidou



Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 

Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal - Consultant: Ignacio Villarreal Jr.
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Rmz. - Marketing: Carla Gutiérrez
Web Developer: Gabriel Sifuentes - Special Contributor: Liz Gangemi
Special Advisor: Carlos Amador - Contributing Editor: Carolina Farias
Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org theavemaria.org juncodelavega.org facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. The most varied versions
of this beautiful prayer.
Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site