Protopoème : Sol, Sono & Urubus

Exhibition

Architecture, urban art, dance, drawing...

Protopoème : Sol, Sono & Urubus

Past: December 8, 2018 → February 2, 2019

Clarissa baumann galerie dohyang lee paris exposition 1 1 grid Clarissa Baumann — Galerie Dohyang Lee La galerie Dohyang Lee présente jusqu'au 02 février une exposition personnelle de l'artiste Clarissa Baumann (née en 1988) qui mult... 2 - Bien Critique

How can language construct a sense of closeness with the world? How can it translate an awareness of the surrounding space? And what could be said if this language were to become inaudible, having dispensed with words? These are the questions posed by Clarissa Baumann in her monographic exhibition at the Dohyang Lee Gallery. The title Protopoem: Sol, Sono & Urubus, in this regard, announces slow, aerial tones — sun, sleep and the vulture, when translated from the Portuguese — even if their French pronunciation suggests other colours: ground and sound, whereas urubus resonates through its strangeness and leads us to an imaginary idiom. Under these conditions, the protopoem could be the language primer of an intuition that nothing can confirm. Only momentum and groping movements, as if it remained suspended between two airs, destined to operate in perpetual incompletion.

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Exhibition of Clarissa Baumann, Protopoème : Sono, Sol & Urubus Photo © Aurélien Mole

We notice straight away that Clarissa Baumann’s propositions suggest a retreat from immediacy in her evocations and interpretations. Performance, video and text attest to this, since her manner of proceeding by reunification and interconnections seems to circumscribe a form of reality composed of different layers, which would have gone astray in a single form. Without losing any of the poetry that befits instigations whose outlines are not always perceivable, Clarissa Baumann’s intended trajectory proceeds in this manner by accumulating symptoms and hidden suggestions, based, nevertheless, on a text by Angolan author Jose Eduardo Agualusa, Milagrário Pessoal : two passages are exhibited on the gallery walls. The narrative, between fable and fiction, relates a series of events in which a character inherits a language comparable to that of birds. The writing, as well as the narration, plays with neologisms and phonetics in order to draw connections between language, spatiality and animality. A notion of territory is highlighted, in particular when its appropriation operates not only on the mode of convention or arrangement, but through abstract, intuitive gestures, those composed by the body, voice, memory and, assuredly, language.

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Exhibition of Clarissa Baumann, Protopoème : Sono, Sol & Urubus Photo © Aurélien Mole

In this context, the performance Passarada, which opens the exhibition, creates an ideal frame for the issues that concern Clarissa Baumann, while offering a certain number of intermediary paths. Coordinated with Kidows Kim and Olavo Vianna, 24 handcrafted wooden decoys are activated among the public, then worn on faces in order to dissimulate features. What appears then is akin to a mask whose physiognomy, between archaic vestige and ritual object, recalls forgotten or fantastical times. The origin of the sound gradually fades away, mixing with the other sound pieces in the gallery. With this in mind, three elements can be specified.

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Exhibition of Clarissa Baumann, Protopoème : Sono, Sol & Urubus Photo © Aurélien Mole

Of utmost importance are the gestures and manner in which hands sculpt meaning in the air. In Clarissa Baumann’s work, hands always seem to possess choreographic reality, as can been seen in the video TAC TAC (Bate-Pedra), also on display, in which two stones are struck continually one against the other until fatigue wears them away. Hands, globally, seem to speak of the primordial interaction that every body and being weaves into the immediate surrounding environment, in order to affirm ones presence and capacity of interaction.

Secondly, the fact of dissimulating the face behind these same hands clarifies a narrative in which one makes oneself invisible from the eyes of the world; not because one is afraid of being recognized, but in order to reduce the identity codes we live by. To become imperceptible, unnamed, united to the ample, uniform multitude, like a breath of air, is undoubtedly a way of being inscribed in a cohesive relationship with all that exists. Consequently, one measures the surrounding rhythm and flow, both present and indistinguishable, as can be seen in the video Araponga, which plunges us into the vast maze of a jungle, lost among the cries and songs of the thousands of beings who live there.

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Exhibition of Clarissa Baumann, Protopoème : Sono, Sol & Urubus Photo © Aurélien Mole

Thirdly, one considers the proximity with the animal kingdom, not in the perspective of copying it, resembling it or being transformed into one of its representatives, but in order to prolong its roaming. Animals are no different from us as human beings seen from this point of view. They are living beings dealing with their milieu, which is also our milieu, although unknown and invisible. It may be more accurate to perceive, through the language of birds in Agualusa’s text, the acquisition of the ability to free ourselves of our humanity overly subjected to arbitrarily decided foundations — what may be called culture — in order to recover an essential standing point, a situation that could be qualified as non-human.

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Exhibition of Clarissa Baumann, Protopoème : Sono, Sol & Urubus Photo © Aurélien Mole

Through Clarissa Baumann’s diverse inspirations, one perceives her acute manner of collecting the minute nuances of our surroundings, at times on a banal scale, leading nevertheless to issues of a much wider range. The core of her practice could be defined as the necessity of collecting these nuances, in order to read them and interpret them. It is no coincidence that the question of language, among other themes, appears so insistently in her work. Words personify self-expression in all attempts to address the world, while they also make up for a way of being impregnated by the world. These words, however, are only words; they are interchangeable, and what counts, finally, Clarissa Baumann seems to tell us, is the effusion of sensitivity that flows from them, their texture, especially when they have been collected by using methods other than those of the eyes of the spirit. Within this framework, the exhibition Protopoem: Sol, Sono & Urubus invites us to a stance that is both poetic and contemplative.

Julien Verhaeghe, art critic // Translated in English by Emmelene Landon.
  • Passarada Performance Saturday, December 8, 2018 7 PM → 8 PM

    Performance by Clarissa Baumann, Passarada, with Kidows Kim et Olavo Vianna, on Saturday December 08th 2018 at 7 pm, for the solo show Protopoème : Sol, Sono & Urubus

    Twenty four wooden craft duck calls reproducing the song of various Brazilian birds. The duck calls are exhibited in relationship with Agualusa’s text in the space of the gallery and activated for the opening during the performance Passarada. Three perofrmers circulate between the visitors, approaching themselves to the public to slightly whistle in the duck calls. A mask is created in the hands, face, and the duck calls are put in the mouth, hiding and revealing at the same time the origin of the sound. The performance’s sound mixes with the spaces of the gallery and the sound of the videos Araponga, Tac-tac and the song Secando a Água (The minor’s song).

  • Opening Saturday, January 12, 2019 6 PM → 9 PM

    How can language construct a sense of closeness with the world? How can it translate an awareness of the surrounding space? And what could be said if this language were to become inaudible, having dispensed with words? These are the questions posed by Clarissa Baumann in her monographic exhibition at the Dohyang Lee Gallery.

03 Le Marais Zoom in 03 Le Marais Zoom out

73-75, rue Quincampoix

75003 Paris

T. 01 42 77 05 97 — F. 01 42 76 94 47

www.galeriedohyanglee.com

Les Halles
Rambuteau

Opening hours

Tuesday – Saturday, 2 PM – 7 PM
Other times by appointment

The artist

  • Clarissa Baumann