Ugo Rondinone “the water is a poem unwritten by the air no. the earth is a poem unwritten by the fire” at Petit Palais, Paris

Revolving around human bodies in get in touch with with the components and character, these operates are in retaining with the a number of households of is effective created by the artist since the late 1980s. Earth, sky, air, water and fire, affiliated with beings at rest or in movement, are invoked in the fulness of their non secular
dimension.

The to start with ensemble, humansky, welcomes site visitors and promptly underlines the melding of being and the features: seven moulded, suspended bodies embellished with a blue cloud-dotted sky “camouflage” confronting visitors with water and air.

The next group, traditionally the supply of this trilogy, is composed of nudes. Manufactured from a blend of transparent wax and earth collected from seven continents, these sculptures also have a “camouflage” seem stemming from the mixing of their non-homogeneous components. They depict the bodies of male and feminine dancers seated and at rest. Produced on a human scale, these nudes appear practical at first, right until the visitor, coming nearer, discovers their obviously artificial aspect, significantly obvious at the junction of their limbs with their bodies. These sculptures are thus “paradoxical” in their compliance with the Rondinone aesthetic: he plays on the “opposition” concerning what is envisioned of a dancer, and the pose he will make each a person suppose. Banishing any choreographed gesture and any reference to the phase space, these motionless, withdrawn bodies feel to have turn out to be one particular with nature, intensely concentrated and shed in a meditative condition.

From one ensemble to the up coming people witness a system of bodies in mutation: shifting from the ethereal suspension of humansky to the quasi-lethargy of the nudes, the bodies are “reborn” in the film melt away to shine, whose presentation at the Petit Palais is a planet premiere. The movie is projected onto six screens inside a cylindrical place built of charred wood and forming a circle, a recurring geometric figure for the artist. The body is in movement here: 12 percussionists and 18 male and feminine dancers are gathered all-around a fireplace in the desert. Combining an ancestral trance from the Maghreb with the gestures of a modern day dance conceived with the assistance of Franco-Moroccan choreographer Fouad Boussouf, they unite with character from sunset right until dawn, when the solar rises all over again.

The cylinder’s wooden slats exclude any perspective of the exterior they reveal a route to observe. Due to the fact the beginning of his career, Ugo Rondinone has regarded it important to build an enclosed “isolated” surroundings facilitating dialogue with character. Hence the relevance for him of presentation gambits attenuating the existence of the encompassing city landscape. The filters on the windows—when the sunshine goes down and the moon will come up—in the sculpture gallery and the north pavilion are portion of this quest and remind us over all that every of Rondinone’s exhibitions is inherently a work of art in its own proper.

In accordance to the artist, the link amongst the very first two groups and burn up to shine is a wish for transformation: “The preliminary inspiration arrived from a poem by John Giorno titled ‘You need to burn off to shine’”: a Buddhist proverb about the coexistence of lifetime and demise, reminiscent of the much older Greek myth of the phoenix, the immortal chook that regenerates cyclically or is reborn in a unique way. Linked with the sunlight, the phoenix gets new daily life by resurrecting from the ashes of its predecessor.”

Last of all, the artist has taken into account functions belonging to the Petit Palais, with which his very own are confronted in this article. He has turned to anthropomorphic sculptures from the museum’s selection to far better “contextualise” the nudes and surrounded the cylinder of melt away to shine with four paintings by Eugène Carrière.

at Petit Palais, Paris
until finally January 8, 2023