The distinctive practice of Céline Ahond (born 1979 in Clermont-Ferrand, lives and works in Montreuil) finds expression in art venues,
books and
public spaces—in the form of collective experiences. She drew critical attention in the early 2000s with
performance-lecturess involving
narratives of all kinds, printed and projected images,
video systems and presentations of objects. She followed up with “film performances” with evocative titles like
You See What I Mean?,
What Film Are We Living in? and
Playing at Really Pretending. On the fine line between
documentary and zany fiction, these are real-fake reconstructions whose role-playing blurs identities and the relationship between the real and the imaginary. Ahond is a past master in constructing situations that open up territories for action, speaking out and inventing a specific language; and in doing so she explores the way “the encounter generates art”.