les presses du réel

Fabricateurs d'espaces

excerpt
Introduction
Nathalie Ergino
(p. 6-7)


Fabricateurs d'espaces brings together eight artists at a specific point in time, but with no historical perspective in mind: its primary aim is to explore and test out an a priori different practice of sculpture.
Whatever the focus—ambient space wherever it may be, the interior or the exterior of the exhibition, the depths of the earth or the cosmos— what unifies these approaches in all the title's explicit multiplicity is an uncompromising concern with space. That space which, permeates and encompasses us entirely by virtue of the earth's spherical shape.
The term fabricateurs (“makers”/”fabricators”) bulks out this seemingly abstract dimension in the interests of interaction between materiality and immateriality, gravity and weightlessness. There is, too, an undisguised ambivalence in the term: “to fabricate” in the sense of creating works of the mind, and of inventing illusion.
Here our fabricateurs use space as an actual material, with the tangible components—wood, metal, objects, etc.—becoming its tools, “drawing” it as if it were contained by matter itself.
These three-dimensional works are neither installations nor arrangements of readymades. The artists' willingness to speak of “sculpture” enables them, despite the word's classical connotations, to break free of their immediate heritage—that of the 1960s and 1970s. Reading Michel Gauthier's historical outline, with its focus on the “spacious work” and the “situated work”, we perceive that while the the fabricateurs' offerings undeniably use a Conceptual—and sometimes Minimalist—vocabulary, they are not directly concerned with the exhibition venue, its architectural context or its neutral, white cube aspect.
Nonetheless, they do find inspiration in linking the spacious approach of a Kaprow to the expansive, active, multi-directional stance of a Pollock. A number actually head off outdoors, drawing on the notion of “expanded sculpture” posited by Rosalind Kraus's analysis of Land Art practices. We also sense here the loss of bearings deliberately induced by the perceptual and immersive experiments of Gianni Colombo, Robert Irwin, Ann Veronica Janssens and others.
The fabricateurs' aim is self-propulsion beyond all boundaries. As if in quest of some kind of elsewhere, their tension-imbued works strive, strain and push to the point of disintegration.
Hans Schabus urges us to scale the barrier of a physical and psychological fence; Vincent Lamouroux mentally projects himself to the centre of the Earth; Michael Sailstorfer captures the depths and activities of a building while reaching out towards the cosmos; Jeppe Hein sets walls in movement, Guillaume Leblon goes through them; Björn Dalhem brings in the unfeasible depiction of a black hole; and Evariste Richer probes the unknown, the unrepresentable, as he looks beyond The Parrot's Eye, beyond the actuality of seeing.
While they can sometimes seem static and disembodied, the spaces generated by the fabricateurs are in fact perpetually in motion: from the friction of Sailstorfer's car tyre to the smoke filtering out from under Leblon's walls, they deploy energy and power, behaving as if they were active components of the universe.
Whence critic Nadine Descendre's question, “Why are so many artists now bent on propelling their works into a stellar non-field somewhere between entropy and black holes?” Are they, as Anne Bonnin suggests, “out to conquer a living-space”?
Or are they trying to generate a different perception of an accelerating world in which space and time become one, even as they proliferate ad infinitum?


 top of page