Didier Semin – Locus Solus, 57.
Sublimation
of a sparrow's feet (excerpt, p. 80-83)
The first time I encountered Patrick Neu—if I may be permitted to indulge
in reminiscence—was with Georges Didi-Huberman, in 1996. Together we were
organizing an exhibition entitled
L'Empreinte (1), at the Georges Pompidou Center. Patrick
Neu came warmly recommended to us by
Sarkis, his former professor at the École supérieure
des arts décoratifs in Strasbourg. I had seen only one or two of his works up to that
time, and I did not have a clear image of them, but
Sarkis's judgment was reliable, and
my own curiosity was further piqued by an unexpected detail personal in nature. Neu
lived and worked near Bitche, not far from the ponds of Haspelschiedt and Hasselfurth,
in the border region north of Lorraine. In the world of Parisian art, this area seems nearly
as exotic as the Sepik Valley or the Salomon Islands; but this is where I spent some
of the happiest Sundays of my childhood. The fact that Neu did not disown this rugged
land for the sake of his career as is customary, and our shared attachment to the place
inspired in me a sense of kinship. I waited for him with an
a priori favorable disposition
at the café where we had arranged to meet. I was not disappointed. After a brief
exchange of polite greetings—the man is what we call in my family a “taciturnist,”
averse to needless chatter—Neu pulled two small Seita matchboxes from his pocket.
The first box, lined with hydrophilic cotton, contained a silver casting of a young
woman's lips, an object only a millimeter or two thick. The second housed a sort of an
extraordinary Lilliputian monument:
two sparrow's feet cast with astounding precision
in brilliant steel, resting on a metal base the size of a thimble, and pointing towards
the distant sky like the feet of dead birds by the country roadside.
One of the challenges of the project which Georges Didi-Huberman
and I had undertaken was to understand, as accurately as possible,
how works of art
were made. Historians and critics are accustomed to plunging headlong into interpretation,
to begin discoursing immediately and ad infinitum on the
why of the works:
their social role, their originality or their aspiration to transcendence, depending on the
period and school of thought. Our supposition was that one should first inquire into the
how: that the modes of operating and of fabricating art communicate an anthropological
signification inaccessible to presumptuous analysis overconfident in its theoretical tools.
It was quite natural then, that we questioned Patrick Neu on the process of fabrication
of the two objects extracted from their matchboxes as if they were jewels. The method
used to manufacture the silver lips (light as kisses blown by lovers and children who
imagine that a kiss is a feather in the palm of their hand), was not particularly mysterious:
the artist used the technique of
cire perdue, or the lost wax process—one of the
most basic methods of hollow casting—starting from an alginate mould. The sparrow's
feet, however, were fabricated differently. If one wishes to obtain a metal duplicate of a perishable object, a plant or other organic matter for example, and one doesn't require
the preservation of the original, one may bypass the production of a wax cast. The perishable
object can be encased in refractory plaster and then calcined with molten metal
which simply replaces the object in the mould. This method, which results in the loss of
the cast object, allows for imprints of extreme precision, in all respects faithful to the
vanished model. This process bears the unhoped-for name of
sublimation. It is this very
method which Neu retained for his sparrow's feet; steel, which has a higher melting
temperature than either bronze or silver, was particularly well-suited for the operation.
The coincidence of practical vocabulary with the terminology used
in aesthetics or in history poetically confirmed Warburg's dictum (which guided the
preparation
of our exhibition) that “God dwells in the detail” (“
Der liebe Gott steckt im
Detail”
(2)), even if it is technical detail. There was something truly sublime about this
steel monument for a dead bird, something that surpassed, despite its height of 1.5 cm,
the emotion provoked by much more ambitious mausoleums. One could ask whether
the idea of the sublimation of a dead sparrow's feet might not be a metaphor for Neu's
oeuvre as a whole, with its principal characteristic of reconciling ambition and lightness,
apparent insignificance and gravity, perfect modesty and absolute technical mastery.
This exercise in sculptural acrobatics has few equals in the so-called scene of contemporary
art (which is, in fact, all too often a “scene.”) (...)
1. Exhibition
L'empreinte (Imprint), February-May 1997,
Centre Georges Pompidou, Paris.
Curators: Georges Didi-Huberman and
Didier Semin.
Exhibiting Artists:
Arman, Georges Braque,
Marcel Broodthaers,
Marcel Duchamp,
Hubert Duprat, Max Ernst, Bernard Frize, Simon Hantaï,
Michel Journiac,
Yves Klein, Roy Lichtenstein, Richard Long, Joan Miró, Patrick Neu,
Dennis Oppenheim, Giuseppe Penone, Pablo Picasso, Man Ray,
Gerhard Richter,
Robert Ryman, Niele Toroni,
Claude Viallat, et al.
2. See: Ernst Gombrich,
Aby Warburg: An intellectual biography.
Oxford: Phaidon, 1970. pp 13–14, note 1.